Far-infrared study of tracers of oxygen chemistry in diffuse clouds
H. Wiesemeyer, R. G\"usten, S. Heyminck, H.W. H\"ubers, K.M. Menten,, D.A. Neufeld, H. Richter, R. Simon, J. Stutzki, B. Winkel, F. Wyrowski

TL;DR
This study uses far-infrared absorption spectra to investigate the relationship between atomic oxygen, OH, and OH+ in diffuse interstellar clouds, revealing correlations with hydrogen phases and insights into interstellar chemistry pathways.
Contribution
It provides observational confirmation of atomic oxygen's association with different gas phases and analyzes the abundance ratios of OH and OH+ relative to H2 in diffuse clouds.
Findings
Atomic oxygen abundance is about 3 x 10^-4 relative to H nuclei.
OH and OH+ show different velocity structures, indicating different physical conditions.
OH is more concentrated in denser regions than OH+.
Abstract
Context. The chemistry of the diffuse interstellar medium rests upon three pillars: exothermic ion-neutral reactions (" cold chemistry "), endothermic neutral-neutral reactions with significant activation barriers (" warm chemistry "), and reactions on the surfaces of dust grains. While warm chemistry becomes important in the shocks associated with turbulent dissipation regions, the main path for the formation of interstellar OH and H2O is that of cold chemistry. Aims. The aim of this study is to observationally confirm the association of atomic oxygen with both atomic and molecular gas phases, and to understand the measured abundances of OH and OH + as a function of the available reservoir of H2. Methods. We obtained absorption spectra of the ground states of OH, OH+ and OI with high-velocity resolution, with GREAT on-board SOFIA, and with the THz receiver at the APEX. We analyzed them…
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