Multiline observations of hydrogen, helium, and carbon radio-recombination lines toward Orion A: A detailed dynamical study and direct determination of physical conditions
C. H. M. Pabst, J. R. Goicoechea, S. Cuadrado, P. Salas, A. G. G. M., Tielens, N. Marcelino

TL;DR
This study uses radio-recombination lines and complementary observations to analyze the physical conditions and dynamics of ionized and neutral gas in the Orion Nebula complex, revealing turbulence and pressure balances.
Contribution
First detailed multi-line radio-recombination line analysis of Orion A, combining high-resolution data with multi-wavelength observations to infer physical conditions and gas dynamics.
Findings
Broader line widths indicate significant turbulence in the gas.
Turbulent pressure dominates in neutral and molecular gas, thermal pressure in ionized gas.
Detected faint lines possibly from C$^+$ or O$^+$.
Abstract
We present a study of hydrogen, helium, and carbon millimeter-wave radio-recombination lines (RRLs) toward ten representative positions throughout the Orion Nebula complex, using the Yebes 40m telescope in the Q band (31.3 GHz to 50.6 GHz) at an angular resolution of about (0.09\,pc). The observed positions include the Orion Nebula (M42) with the Orion Molecular Core 1, M43, and the Orion Molecular Core 3 bordering on NGC 1973, 1975, and 1977. While hydrogen and helium RRLs arise in the ionized gas surrounding the massive stars in the Orion Nebula complex, carbon RRLs stem from the neutral gas of the adjacent photo-dissociation regions (PDRs). The high velocity resolution () enables us to discern the detailed dynamics of the RRL emitting neutral and ionized gas. We compare the carbon RRLs with SOFIA/upGREAT observations of the [CII]…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
