Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Conference participants
- Conference photograph / poster
- 1 Physics of H2 and HD
- Astrophysical Importance of H2
- Radiative and Electronic Excitation of Lyman and Werner Transitions in H2
- The Cooling of Astrophysical Media by H2 and HD
- Highly Excited Singlet Ungerade States of H2 and their Theoretical Description
- Laboratory Studies of Long-range Excited States of H2
- A Model of Interstellar Dark Matter
- Mass of H2 Dark Matter in the Galactic Halo
- 2 Formation - Destruction
- 3 Observations and Models
- 4 Extragalactic and Cosmology
- 5 Outlook
- Author index
A Model of Interstellar Dark Matter
from 1 - Physics of H2 and HD
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Conference participants
- Conference photograph / poster
- 1 Physics of H2 and HD
- Astrophysical Importance of H2
- Radiative and Electronic Excitation of Lyman and Werner Transitions in H2
- The Cooling of Astrophysical Media by H2 and HD
- Highly Excited Singlet Ungerade States of H2 and their Theoretical Description
- Laboratory Studies of Long-range Excited States of H2
- A Model of Interstellar Dark Matter
- Mass of H2 Dark Matter in the Galactic Halo
- 2 Formation - Destruction
- 3 Observations and Models
- 4 Extragalactic and Cosmology
- 5 Outlook
- Author index
Summary
Two observable quantities have been calculated by using the data blocks which provide all details of interstellar UV absorption in H2 gas from the electronic ground state of H2 into 6 electronically excited states and fluorescence emission back into bound and continuum states of the electronic ground state. Both quantities describe details happening in the edges of interstellar H2 abundances where UV radiation is very efficiently shielded and HI gas is produced by fluorescent radiative dissociation. The first is the fluorescence spectrum of H2 in the wavelength range between 1350 and 1700 Å. Comparisons with published spectra show very nice agreement of the resolved features. The second is the velocity distribution of HI produced in fluorescent radiative dissociation. Subject of this comparison are the observed 21 cm spin-flip line profiles of the CNM and WNM (Cold and Warm Neutral Medium) HI species. The profile of the HI velocity dispersion, compared with the “narrow” WNM component, has been obtained at ≈ 9 km/s FWHM which is slightly below the statistical average, and this profile was found to be a molecular property of the H2 gas rather than a function of intensity of the incident UV field or the temperature. The required long tail (“wide” Gaussian component) is provided by all LTE models.
The rest of the paper is devoted to an outline of a dark matter model which fulfills the condition of statistical equilibrium in an active gaseous interphase between the interstellar UV field and the constituent dark matter mass.
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- Information
- Molecular Hydrogen in Space , pp. 47 - 56Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000