Ammonia excitation imaging of shocked gas towards the W28 gamma-ray source HESS J1801-233
Nigel I. Maxted, Phoebe de Wilt, Gavin P. Rowell, Brent P. Nicholas,, Michael. G. Burton, Andrew Walsh, Yasuo Fukui, and Akiko Kawamura

TL;DR
This study uses ammonia imaging to analyze shock interactions and high-temperature conditions in a molecular cloud near the W28 supernova remnant, revealing shock disruption, ammonia sublimation, and cloud heating.
Contribution
It provides detailed ammonia excitation imaging data showing shock effects and ammonia enrichment in a supernova remnant-molecular cloud interaction region.
Findings
Shock disruption evident from broad NH3 line-widths.
High temperatures indicated by extended NH3 emission.
NH3 enrichment suggests sublimation from dust grains.
Abstract
We present 12 mm Mopra observations of the dense (>10^3 cm^-3 ) molecular gas towards the north-east (NE) of the W28 supernova remnant (SNR). This cloud is spatially well-matched to the TeV gamma-ray source HESS J1801-233 and is known to be a SNR-molecular cloud interaction region. Shock-disruption is evident from broad NH3 (1,1) spectral line-widths in regions towards the W28 SNR, while strong detections of spatially-extended NH3(3,3), NH3(4,4) and NH3(6,6) inversion emission towards the cloud strengthen the case for the existence of high temperatures within the cloud. Velocity dispersion measurements and NH3(n,n)/(1,1) ratio maps, where n=2, 3, 4 and 6, indicate that the source of disruption is from the side of the cloud nearest to the W28 SNR, suggesting that it is the source of cloud-disruption. Towards part of the cloud, the ratio of ortho to para-NH3 is observed to exceed 2,…
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