The Transition from Diffuse Molecular Gas to Molecular Cloud Material in Taurus
S. R. Federman (1), Johnathan S. Rice (1), A. M. Ritchey (2), Hwihyun, Kim (3), John H. Lacy (4), Paul F. Goldsmith (5), Nicolas Flagey (6, 7),, Gregory N. Mace (4), and David L. Lambert (4) ((1) University of Toledo, (2), Eureka Scientific, (3) Gemini Observatory

TL;DR
This study investigates the transition from diffuse molecular gas to dense molecular cloud material in Taurus, using multi-wavelength absorption measurements to characterize physical conditions and chemical compositions along four sight lines.
Contribution
It provides detailed physical and chemical analysis of gas transitioning from diffuse to dense states in Taurus, combining new high-resolution spectra with existing data to reveal cloud properties.
Findings
HD29647 shows dark cloud conditions with high CO and low temperature.
Some sight lines probe CO-dark diffuse clouds with molecule-rich gas.
Dust temperature maps help estimate distances and cloud structure.
Abstract
We study four lines of sight that probe the transition from diffuse molecular gas to molecular cloud material in Taurus. Measurements of atomic and molecular absorption are used to infer the distribution of species and the physical conditions toward stars behind the Taurus Molecular Cloud (TMC). New high-resolution spectra at visible and near infrared wavelengths of interstellar Ca II, Ca I, K I, CH, CH^+, C2, CN, and CO toward HD28975 and HD29647 are combined with data at visible wavelengths and published CO results from ultraviolet measurements for HD27778 and HD30122. Gas densities and temperatures are inferred from C2, CN, and CO excitation and CN chemistry. Our results for HD29647 are noteworthy because the CO column density is 10^{18} cm^{-2} while C2 and CO excitation reveals a temperature of 10 K and density about 1000 cm^{-3}, more like conditions found in dark molecular…
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