Shock excitation of H$_2$ in the James Webb Space Telescope era
L.E. Kristensen, B. Godard, P. Guillard, A. Gusdorf, G. Pineau des, Forets

TL;DR
This study uses extensive shock models to analyze H2 emission in various astrophysical environments, highlighting how magnetic fields and UV radiation influence excitation and emission signatures observable by JWST.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive grid of 14,000 shock models exploring H2 excitation, incorporating parameters like magnetic fields and UV radiation, to interpret JWST observations.
Findings
Magnetic field strength determines whether vibrational or rotational lines dominate H2 emission.
External UV radiation enhances H2 excitation, especially when kinetic energy flux is high.
Shocks with strong magnetic fields can be spatially resolved by JWST in nearby objects.
Abstract
(Abridged) H2 is the most abundant molecule in the Universe. Thanks to its widely spaced energy levels, it predominantly lights up in warm gas, T > 100 K, such as shocked regions, and it is one of the key targets of JWST observations. These include shocks from protostellar outflows, all the way up to starburst galaxies and AGN. Shock models are able to simulate H2 emission. We aim to explore H2 excitation using such models, and to test over which parameter space distinct signatures are produced in H2 emission. We present simulated H2 emission using the Paris-Durham shock code over an extensive grid of 14,000 plane-parallel stationary shock models, a large subset of which are exposed to an external UV radiation field. The grid samples 6 input parameters: preshock density, shock velocity, transverse magnetic field strength, UV radiation field strength, cosmic-ray-ionization rate, and PAH…
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