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Interstellar molecular hydrogen

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 August 2015

Philip M. Solomon*
Affiliation:
Columbia University, New York, N.Y., U.S.A.

Abstract

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The dominant photodissociation process for H2 under interstellar conditions is absorption in the lines of the ultraviolet Lyman bands at 912 Å < λ < 1108 Å and re-emission into the continuum at λ ~ 1600 Å. It is shown that 40% of all upward transitions in this band lead to emission into the continuum of the ground state and therefore dissociation of the molecule. The photodissociation rate is calculated and the theory is developed for the abundance of interstellar H2. It is shown that interstellar space will be divided into atomic and molecular regions in a manner analogous to the division between Hii and Hi regions. The molecular regions will exist only where the rate of formation of H2 is sufficiently great to build up a self-shielding layer. This is expected in cold clouds with number densities greater than 100 atoms cm−3. Normal regions of interstellar space will have an extremely small abundance of molecular hydrogen.

Type
Part III: Interstellar Absorption and Emission
Copyright
Copyright © Reidel 1970