Exploring the Possibility of Identifying Hydride and Hydroxyl Cations of Noble Gas Species in the Crab Nebula Filament
Ankan Das, Milan Sil, Bratati Bhat, Prasanta Gorai, Sandip K., Chakrabarti, Paola Caselli

TL;DR
This study models the presence and emission features of noble gas hydride and hydroxyl cations in the Crab Nebula, suggesting potential for their future detection in space.
Contribution
It introduces a spectral synthesis model for noble gas cations in the Crab Nebula, predicting their emission lines and assessing their detectability.
Findings
Successfully explains observed ArH+ and OH+ emission lines
Reproduces surface brightness ratios of molecular and atomic transitions
Identifies promising transitions for future astronomical detection
Abstract
The first identification of the argonium ion (ArH+) towards the Crab Nebula supernova remnant was proclaimed by the Herschel in the sub-millimeter and far-infrared domain. Very recently the discovery of the hydro-helium cation (HeH+) in the planetary nebula (NGC 7027) has been reported by using the SOFIA. The elemental abundance of neon is much higher than that of the argon. However, the presence of neonium ions (NeH+) is yet to be confirmed in space. Though the hydroxyl radicals (OH) are very abundant either in neutral or in the cationic form, hydroxyl cations of such noble gases (i.e., ArOH+, NeOH+, and HeOH+) are yet to be identified in space. Here, we employ a spectral synthesis code to examine the chemical evolution of the hydride and hydroxyl cations of the various isotopes of Ar, Ne, and He in the Crab Nebula filament and calculate their line emissivity and intrinsic line surface…
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