JWST observations of photodissociation regions. IV. Carbonaceous emission band sub-components in NGC 7023 have distinct spatial distributions
D. Van De Putte (1, 2), K. D. Gordon (2, 3), K. Misselt (4), A. N. Witt (5), A. Abergel (6), A. Noriega-Crespo (2), P. Guillard (7), M. Zannese (6), M. Elyajouri (2), B. Trahin (2, 6), P. Dell'ova (6), M. Baes (3), P. Klaassen (8) ((1) Department of Physics & Astronomy

TL;DR
This study uses JWST spectroscopy to analyze the spatial distribution of carbonaceous emission bands in NGC 7023, revealing distinct populations and potential precursors to fullerene formation in a photodissociation region.
Contribution
It identifies different spatial populations of emission carriers in NGC 7023 and links their profiles to photochemical evolution stages leading to fullerene formation.
Findings
Most emission bands peak at the main dissociation front.
Different bands show distinct spatial distribution types.
Profiles evolve toward fullerene emission in the central cavity.
Abstract
We analyze JWST spectroscopy of the northwest filament of NGC7023, where the relatively soft radiation field results in a photodissociation region with an extended atomic hydrogen region, and strongly pronounced variations of the carbonaceous emission band profiles. We focus on the 16.4 and 17.4 um bands and their relation to the main bands at 3.3, 3.4, 5.2, 5.7, 6.2, 7.7, 8.6, 11.3, and 12.7 um, and aim to identify which bands and sub-features originate from co-spatial emission carriers. We apply a PAHFIT spectral decomposition to measure the emission bands and their individual sub-components, and produce maps that spatially resolve the main dissociation front (DF1). Nearly all emission maps peak at DF1, while the relative intensity in the atomic hydrogen region (ATM) varies strongly. We classify the features into spatial distribution types based on the intensity ratio in ATM relative…
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