Supernova Shocks in Molecular Clouds: Velocity Distribution of Molecular Hydrogen
William T. Reach, Le Ngoc Tram, Matthew Richter, Antoine Gusdorf, and, Curtis DeWitt

TL;DR
This study combines new theoretical MHD shock models with SOFIA observations to analyze the velocity distribution of molecular hydrogen in supernova remnant IC443, revealing diverse shock types and conditions in different clumps.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed derivation of H$_2$ line velocity profiles behind supernova shocks, integrating models with observations to interpret shock conditions in IC443.
Findings
Clumps C and G are explained by shocks into dense gas with strong magnetic fields.
Clump B2's spectrum indicates a J-type shock into moderate-density gas with high velocity.
Both C-type and J-type shocks are needed to explain the high velocities in clump B1.
Abstract
Supernovae from core-collapse of massive stars drive shocks into the molecular clouds from which the stars formed. Such shocks affect future star formation from the molecular clouds, and the fast-moving, dense gas with compressed magnetic fields is associated with enhanced cosmic rays. This paper presents new theoretical modeling, using the Paris-Durham shock model, and new observations, using the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA), of the H S(5) pure rotational line from molecular shocks in the supernova remnant IC443. We generate MHD models for non-steady-state shocks driven by the pressure of the IC443 blast wave into gas of densities to cm. We present the first detailed derivation of the shape of the velocity profile for emission from H lines behind such shocks, taking into account the shock age, preshock density, and magnetic…
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