The role of neutral hydrogen in setting the abundances of molecular species in the Milky Way's diffuse interstellar medium. II. Comparison between observations and theoretical models
Daniel R. Rybarczyk, Munan Gong, Snezana Stanimirovic, Brian Babler,, Claire E. Murray, Jan Martin Winters, Gan Luo, T. M. Dame, Lucille Steffes

TL;DR
This study compares observations of neutral hydrogen and HCO$^+$ in the diffuse interstellar medium with theoretical models, revealing that non-equilibrium processes may be necessary to explain certain molecular abundances.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison between observational data and PDR and multi-phase ISM models, highlighting the importance of non-equilibrium chemistry in the diffuse ISM.
Findings
Structures with low T_s are consistent with diffuse molecular ISM models.
High T_s structures suggest environments near star formation.
Observed HCO$^+$ column densities often exceed model predictions, indicating non-equilibrium processes.
Abstract
We compare observations of HI from the Very Large Array (VLA) and the Arecibo Observatory and observations of HCO from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and the Northern Extended Millimeter Array (NOEMA) in the diffuse () interstellar medium (ISM) to predictions from a photodissociation region (PDR) chemical model and multi-phase ISM simulations. Using a coarse grid of PDR models, we estimate the density, FUV radiation field, and cosmic ray ionization rate (CRIR) for each structure identified in HCO and HI absorption. These structures fall into two categories. Structures with , mostly with , are consistent with modest density, FUV radiation field, and CRIR models, typical of the diffuse molecular ISM. Structures with spin temperature , mostly with…
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