Structure of photodissociation fronts in star-forming regions revealed by observations of high-J CO emission lines with Herschel
C. Joblin, E. Bron, C. Pinto, P. Pilleri, F. Le Petit, M. Gerin, J. Le, Bourlot, A. Fuente, O. Berne, J. R. Goicoechea, E. Habart, M. Koehler, D., Teyssier, Z. Nagy, J. Montillaud, C. Vastel, J. Cernicharo, M. Roellig, V., Ossenkopf-Okada (WADI team), E. A. Bergin (HEXOS team)

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel observations and modeling to reveal that high-J CO emissions in star-forming regions originate from small, high-pressure structures at PDR interfaces, linking gas pressure with UV radiation intensity.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive modeling approach for high-J CO lines in PDRs, highlighting the role of small, dense structures and establishing a correlation between gas pressure and UV flux.
Findings
High-J CO emission arises from small, dense structures with high thermal pressure.
Gas thermal pressure increases with UV radiation field strength G0.
The observed pressure-G0 relation aligns with recent cloud photoevaporation simulations.
Abstract
In bright photodissociation regions (PDRs) associated to massive star formation, the presence of dense "clumps" that are immersed in a less dense interclump medium is often proposed to explain the difficulty of models to account for the observed gas emission in high-excitation lines. We aim at presenting a comprehensive view of the modeling of the CO rotational ladder in PDRs, including the high-J lines that trace warm molecular gas at PDR interfaces. We observed the 12CO and 13CO ladders in two prototypical PDRs, the Orion Bar and NGC 7023 NW using the instruments onboard Herschel. We also considered line emission from key species in the gas cooling of PDRs (C+, O, H2) and other tracers of PDR edges such as OH and CH+. All the intensities are collected from Herschel observations, the literature and the Spitzer archive and are analyzed using the Meudon PDR code. A grid of models was run…
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