Production of atomic hydrogen by cosmic rays in dark clouds
Marco Padovani (1), Daniele Galli (1), Alexei V. Ivlev (2), Paola, Caselli (2), Andrea Ferrara (3) ((1) INAF-Osservatorio Astrofisico di, Arcetri, Firenze, Italy, (2) Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Extraterrestrische, Physik, Garching, Germany, (3) Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa

TL;DR
This paper investigates how cosmic rays contribute to atomic hydrogen production in dark clouds, emphasizing the importance of secondary electrons and the cosmic-ray spectrum's shape for explaining observed hydrogen abundances.
Contribution
It models cosmic-ray attenuation and hydrogen dissociation in dark clouds, highlighting the need for an enhanced low-energy proton spectrum to match observations.
Findings
Secondary electrons dominate hydrogen dissociation at high densities.
Dissociation rate decreases with increasing column density.
A flat cosmic-ray proton spectrum underestimates atomic hydrogen abundance.
Abstract
The presence of small amounts of atomic hydrogen, detected as absorption dips in the 21 cm line spectrum, is a well-known characteristic of dark clouds. The abundance of hydrogen atoms measured in the densest regions of molecular clouds can be only explained by the dissociation of H due to cosmic rays. We want to assess the role of Galactic cosmic rays in the formation of atomic hydrogen, by using recent developments in the characterisation of the low-energy spectra of cosmic rays and advances in the modelling of their propagation in molecular clouds. We model the attenuation of the interstellar cosmic rays entering a cloud and compute the dissociation rate of molecular hydrogen due to collisions with cosmic-ray protons and electrons as well as fast hydrogen atoms. We compare our results with the available observations. The cosmic-ray dissociation rate is entirely determined by…
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