The importance of radiative pumping on the emission of the H_2O submillimeter lines in galaxies
Eduardo Gonz\'alez-Alfonso, Jacqueline Fischer, Javier R. Goicoechea,, Chentao Yang, Miguel Pereira-Santaella, Kenneth P. Stewart

TL;DR
This study investigates the excitation mechanisms of H_2O submillimeter lines in galaxies, demonstrating that radiative pumping by far-infrared photons generally dominates over collisional excitation, which impacts the interpretation of water emission as a diagnostic tool.
Contribution
The paper introduces two diagnostics to distinguish between radiative and collisional excitation of H_2O lines and applies them to a sample of galaxies, clarifying the dominant excitation mechanism.
Findings
Most extragalactic H_2O submillimeter emission is dominated by far-infrared radiative pumping.
In some sources, collisional excitation of low-energy levels also contributes.
The results influence the interpretation of H_2O luminosity as a star formation indicator.
Abstract
H_2O submillimeter emission is a powerful diagnostic of the molecular interstellar medium in a variety of sources, including low- and high-mass star forming regions of the Milky Way, and from local to high redshift galaxies. However, the excitation mechanism of these lines in galaxies has been debated, preventing a basic consensus on the physical information that H_2O provides. Both radiative pumping due to H_2O absorption of far-infrared photons emitted by dust and collisional excitation in dense shocked gas have been proposed to explain the H_2O emission. Here we propose two basic diagnostics to distinguish between the two mechanisms: 1) in shock excited regions, the ortho-H_2O 3_{21}-2_{12} 75um and the para-H_2O 2_{20}-1_{11} 101um rotational lines are expected to be in emission while, if radiative pumping dominates, both far-infrared lines are expected to be in absorption; 2) based…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications · Atomic and Molecular Physics
