Compression and ablation of the photo-irradiated cloud the Orion Bar
Javier R. Goicoechea, J. Pety, S. Cuadrado, J. Cernicharo, E., Chapillon, A. Fuente, M. Gerin, C. Joblin, N. Marcelino, P. Pilleri

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution millimetre-wave imaging to reveal the dynamic, fragmented structure of the Orion Bar's molecular cloud surface, challenging static equilibrium models and highlighting the importance of dynamical effects in cloud evolution.
Contribution
The paper provides the first high-resolution observations showing the Orion Bar's cloud surface is fragmented and dynamically compressed, contrasting with previous static models.
Findings
No offset between H2 emission and CO/HCO+ emission peaks.
Detection of high-density substructures and gas flows.
Evidence of cloud compression by a high-pressure wave.
Abstract
The Orion Bar is the archetypal edge-on molecular cloud surface illuminated by strong ultraviolet radiation from nearby massive stars. Owing to the close distance to Orion (about 1,350 light-year), the effects of stellar feedback on the parental cloud can be studied in detail. Visible-light observations of the Bar(1) show that the transition between the hot ionised gas and the warm neutral atomic gas (the ionisation front) is spatially well separated from the transition from atomic to molecular gas (the dissociation front): about 15 arcseconds or 6,200 astronomical units (one astronomical unit is the Earth-Sun distance). Static equilibrium models(2,3) used to interpret previous far-infrared and radio observations of the neutral gas in the Bar(4,5,6) (typically at 10-20 arcsecond resolution) predict an inhomogeneous cloud structure consisting of dense clumps embedded in a lower density…
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