Physical conditions in the gas phases of the giant HII region LMC-N11: II. Origin of [CII] and fraction of CO-dark gas
V. Lebouteiller, D. Cormier, S. C. Madden, M. Galametz, S. Hony,, Fr\'ed\'eric Galliano, M. Chevance, Min-Young Lee, J. Braine, F. L. Polles,, M. Angel Reque\~na-Torres, R. Indebetouw, A. Hughes, N. Abel

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin of [CII] emission in the giant HII region N11, revealing that most [CII] traces CO-dark H2 gas and emphasizing the importance of velocity-resolved diagnostics for understanding interstellar medium conditions.
Contribution
Introduces a spectral decomposition method to analyze [CII] profiles and quantify the CO-dark H2 gas fraction in a giant HII region, linking it to environmental factors.
Findings
[CII] mainly originates from neutral gas.
Most molecular gas is CO-dark.
CO-dark H2 fraction decreases with higher CO column density.
Abstract
(abridged) The ambiguous origin of [CII] 158um in the interstellar medium complicates its use for diagnostics concerning the star-formation rate and physical conditions in photodissociation regions (PDRs). We observed the giant HII region N11 in the Large Magellanic Cloud with SOFIA/GREAT in order to investigate the origin of [CII] to obtain the total H2 gas content, the fraction of CO-dark H2 gas, and the influence of environmental effects such as stellar feedback. We present an innovative spectral decomposition method that allows statistical trends to be derived. The [CII] line is resolved in velocity and compared to HI and CO, using a Bayesian approach to decompose the profiles. A simple model accounting for collisions in the neutral atomic and molecular gas was used in order to derive the H2 column density traced by C+. The profile of [CII] most closely resembles that of CO, but the…
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