Cooling and Infrared Emission due to Molecular Collisional Excitation in Astrophysical Environments
COFFEE_KLATCH · Invited
Abstract
Non-thermal popluations of molecules in a variety of astronomical environments, including photodissociation regions, X-ray dominated regions, and protoplanetary disks, are controlled by collisional excitation and quenching of their rovibrational levels. The important colliders are the dominant neutral species: H, He, and H$_2$. Resulting emission lines are primary cooling transitions and can be observed by current and upcoming IR/submillimeter observatories including Spitzer, Herschel, SOFIA, and ALMA. Modeling these environments, however, requires large-scale computation of collisional excitation processes. The status, needs, and astrophysical applications for important molecular targets will be reviewed including H$_2$, HD, CO, H$_2$O, and NH$_3$.
*This work was performed in collaboration with B. Yang, T.-G. Lee, J. Nolte, N. Balakrishnan, R. C. Forrey, G. Shaw, D. Quan, and G. J. Ferland and was supported through NASA grants NNG04GN59G and NNX07AP12G and NSF grant AST-0607733.
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