HyGAL: Characterizing the Galactic ISM with observations of hydrides and other small molecules. III. The absorption lines of [O I], CH, and OH
W.-J. Kim, A. M. Jacob, D. A. Neufeld, P. Schilke, H. Wiesemeyer, M. Gerin, M. G. Wolfire, V. Ossenkopf-Okada, V. Valdivia, E. Falgarone, D. C. Lis, S. Bialy, M. R. Rugel, \'A. S\'anchez-Monge, M. Busch, T. M\"oller, F. Wyrowski, D. Seifried, K. M. Menten, and A. Saintonge

TL;DR
This study uses SOFIA observations to analyze the correlations and abundances of small molecules and atomic oxygen in the Galactic interstellar medium, revealing chemical pathways and phase transitions.
Contribution
It provides new insights into molecular and atomic abundances, correlations, and phase transitions in the Galactic ISM using hydride and small molecule absorption lines.
Findings
Strong mutual correlations among H$_2$ tracers CH, OH, HCO$^+$, and CCH.
Gas-phase oxygen abundance is slightly below the solar value.
Atomic hydrogen decreases as molecular fraction increases, indicating molecular phase onset.
Abstract
The HyGAL Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA) legacy program aims at characterizing the interstellar medium in the Milky Way using hydrides, [C II], and [O I] absorption lines with the 2.7 m SOFIA telescope toward twenty-five submillimeter-bright Galactic star-forming regions. As part of HyGAL, we investigated correlations among the known H tracers -- CH and OH from SOFIA observations, and HCO and CCH from ancillary absorption line data from ground-based telescopes. We also examined the abundance variation of neutral atomic oxygen, [O I], observed in absorption. CH, OH, HCO, and CCH all exhibit strong mutual correlations. OH in particular shows tight correlations with HCO and CCH, reflecting their linked chemical and physical pathways. Column density ratios among these H tracers are consistent with previous measurements in local diffuse clouds…
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