A new analytic approach to infer the cosmic-ray ionization rate in hot molecular cores from HCO+, N2H+, and CO observations
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2024
Context. The cosmic-ray ionization rate (ζ2) is one of the key parameters in star formation, since it regulates the chemical and dynamical evolution of molecular clouds by ionizing molecules and determining the coupling between the magnetic field and gas. Aims. However, measurements of ζ2 in dense clouds (e.g., nH ≥ 104 cm-3) are difficult and sensitive to the model assumptions. The aim is to find a convenient analytic approach that can be used in high-mass star-forming regions (HMSFRs), especially for warm gas environments such as hot molecular cores (HMCs). Methods. We propose a new analytic approach to calculate ζ2 through HCO+, N2H+, and CO measurements. By comparing our method with various astrochemical models and with observations found in the literature, we identify the parameter space for which the analytic approach is applicable. Results. Our method gives a good approximation, to within 50%, of ζ2 in dense and warm gas (e.g., nH ≥ 104 cm-3, T = 50, 100 K) for AV ≥ 4 mag and t ≥ 2 × 104 yr at Solar metallicity. The analytic approach gives better results for higher densities. However, it starts to underestimate ζ2 at low metallicity (Z = 0.1 Z⊙) when the value is too high (ζ2 ≥ 3 × 10-15 s-1). By applying our method to the OMC-2 FIR4 envelope and the L1157-B1 shock region, we find ζ2 values of (1.0 ± 0.3) × 10-14 s-1 and (2.2 ± 0.4) × 10-16 s-1, consistent with those previously reported. Conclusions. We calculate ζ2 toward a total of 82 samples in HMSFRs, finding that the average value of ζ2 toward all HMC samples (ζ2 = (7.4±5.0)× 10-16 s-1) is more than an order of magnitude higher than the theoretical prediction of cosmic-ray attenuation models, favoring the scenario that locally accelerated cosmic rays in embedded protostars should be responsible for the observed high ζ2
Stars: formation
Cosmic rays
ISM: clouds
ISM: molecules
ISM: abundances
Astrochemistry