[CII] 158$\mu$m emission from Orion A. II. Photodissociation region physics
C. H. M. Pabst, J. R. Goicoechea, A. Hacar, D. Teyssier, O. Bern\'e,, M. G. Wolfire, R. D. Higgins, E. T. Chambers, S. Kabanovic, R. G\"usten, J., Stutzki, C. Kramer, A. G. G. M. Tielens

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin and physical conditions of [CII] 158μm emission in the Orion A PDRs, analyzing its relation to dust, PAHs, and molecular gas to understand interstellar heating processes.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of [CII] emission in Orion A, linking it to dust and PAH properties, and tests PDR models against multi-wavelength observations.
Findings
[CII] correlates strongly with PAH and warm dust emission.
Photoelectric heating efficiency varies significantly across regions.
Constant-density PDR models successfully reproduce observed emissions.
Abstract
The [CII] 158m fine-structure line is the dominant cooling line of moderate-density photodissociation regions (PDRs) illuminated by moderately bright far-ultraviolet (FUV) radiation fields. We aim to understand the origin of [CII] emission and its relation to other tracers of gas and dust in PDRs. One focus is a study of the heating efficiency of interstellar gas as traced by the [CII] line to test models of the photoelectric heating of neutral gas by polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) molecules and very small grains. We make use of a one-square-degree map of velocity-resolved [CII] line emission toward the Orion Nebula complex, and split this out into the individual spatial components, the expanding Veil Shell, the surface of OMC4, and the PDRs associated with the compact HII region of M43 and the reflection nebula NGC 1977. We employed Herschel far-infrared photometric images…
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