Abstract
Context. The chemistry of the diffuse interstellar medium is driven by the combined influences of cosmic rays, ultraviolet (UV) radiation, and turbulence. Previously detected at the outer edges of photodissociation regions and formed from the reaction of C+ and OH, CO+ is the main chemical precursor of HCO+ and CO in a thermal, cosmic-ray, and UV-driven chemistry. Aims. Our aim was to test whether the thermal cosmic-ray and UV-driven chemistry is producing CO in diffuse interstellar molecular gas through the intermediate formation of CO+. Methods. We searched for CO+ absorption with the Atacama Large Millimeter Array toward two quasars with known Galactic foreground absorption from diffuse interstellar gas, J1717-3342 and J1744-3116, targeting the two strongest hyperfine components of the J = 2−1 transition near 236 GHz. Results. We could not detect CO+ but obtained sensitive upper limits toward both targets. The derived upper limits on the CO+ column densities represent about 4% of the HCO+ column densities. The corresponding upper limit on the CO+ abundance relative to H2 is <1.2 × 10−10. Conclusions. The non-detection of CO+ confirms that HCO+ is mainly produced in the reaction between oxygen and carbon hydrides, CH2+ or CH3+, induced by suprathermal processes, while CO+ and HOC+ result from reactions of C+ with OH and H2O. The densities required to form CO molecules at low extinction are consistent with this scheme.
Highlights
The diffuse interstellar medium (ISM) hosts a rich chemistry where many species reach molecular abundances similar to those in denser and darker regions despite the lower densities and the relatively unattenuated far-ultraviolet (FUV) illumination by the interstellar radiation field (Snow & McCall 2006; Gerin et al 2016, 2019; Liszt et al 2014a,b, 2018)
We searched for CO+ absorption with the Atacama Large Millimeter Array toward two quasars with known Galactic foreground absorption from diffuse interstellar gas, J1717-3342 and J1744-3116, targeting the two strongest hyperfine components of the
There are no reported detections of CO+ in the diffuse and translucent interstellar medium: in this paper, we present observations with the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) that constrain the abundance of CO+ there for the first time
Summary
We searched for CO+ absorption with the Atacama Large Millimeter Array toward two quasars with known Galactic foreground absorption from diffuse interstellar gas, J1717-3342 and J1744-3116, targeting the two strongest hyperfine components of the.
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