Where is OH and Does It Trace the Dark Molecular Gas (DMG)?
Di Li, Ningyu Tang, Hiep Nguyen, J. R. Dawson, Carl Heiles, Duo Xu,, Zhichen Pan, Paul F. Goldsmith, Steven J. Gibson, Claire E. Murray, Tim, Robishaw, N. M. McClure-Griffiths, John Dickey, Jorge Pineda, Sne\v{z}ana, Stanimirovi\'c, L. Bronfman, Thomas Troland

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that hydroxyl (OH) is abundant in diffuse interstellar molecular gas and serves as an effective tracer for dark molecular gas (DMG), with excitation temperatures close to the Galactic background, explaining mapping difficulties.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of OH excitation temperatures and opacities in diffuse gas, establishing OH as a reliable tracer for DMG and highlighting future observational prospects with advanced radio telescopes.
Findings
90% of OH has excitation temperature within 2 K of Galactic background
OH opacities peak around 0.01, indicating low optical depth
OH detection rate is independent of visual extinction for intermediate extinctions
Abstract
Hydroxyl (OH) is expected to be abundant in diffuse interstellar molecular gas as it forms along with under similar conditions and within a similar extinction range. We have analyzed absorption measurements of OH at 1665 MHz and 1667 MHz toward 44 extragalactic continuum sources, together with the J=1-0 transitions of CO, CO , and CO, and the J=2-1 of CO. The excitation temperature of OH were found to follow a modified log-normal distribution, , the peak of which is close to the temperature of the Galactic emission background (CMB+synchron). In fact, 90% of the OH has excitation temperature within 2 K of the Galactic background at the same location, providing a plausible explanation for the apparent difficulty to map this…
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