Abstract

The advent of precise measurements of the CMB anisotropies has motivated correspondingly precise calculations of the cosmic recombination history. Cosmic recombination proceeds far out of equilibrium because of a ``bottleneck'' at the $n=2$ level of hydrogen: atoms can only reach the ground state via slow processes---two-photon decay or Lyman-$\ensuremath{\alpha}$ resonance escape. However, even a small primordial abundance of molecules could have a large effect on the interline opacity in the recombination epoch and lead to an additional route for hydrogen recombination. Therefore, this paper computes the abundance of the ${\mathrm{H}}_{2}$ molecule during the cosmic recombination epoch. Hydrogen molecules in the ground electronic levels ${\mathrm{X}}^{1}{\ensuremath{\Sigma}}_{g}^{+}$ can either form from the excited ${\mathrm{H}}_{2}$ electronic levels ${\mathrm{B}}^{1}{\ensuremath{\Sigma}}_{u}^{+}$ and ${\mathrm{C}}^{1}{\ensuremath{\Pi}}_{u}$ or through the charged particles ${\mathrm{H}}_{2}^{+}$, ${\mathrm{HeH}}^{+}$, and ${\mathrm{H}}^{\ensuremath{-}}$. We follow the transitions among all of these species, resolving the rotational and vibrational sublevels. Since the energies of the ${\mathrm{X}}^{1}{\ensuremath{\Sigma}}_{g}^{+}\ensuremath{-}{\mathrm{B}}^{1}{\ensuremath{\Sigma}}_{u}^{+}$ (Lyman band) and ${\mathrm{X}}^{1}{\ensuremath{\Sigma}}_{g}^{+}\ensuremath{-}{\mathrm{C}}^{1}{\ensuremath{\Pi}}_{u}$ (Werner band) transitions are near the Lyman-$\ensuremath{\alpha}$ energy, the distortion of the CMB spectrum caused by escaped H Lyman-line photons accelerates both the formation and the destruction of ${\mathrm{H}}_{2}$ due to this channel relative to the thermal rates. This causes the populations of ${\mathrm{H}}_{2}$ molecules in ${\mathrm{X}}^{1}{\ensuremath{\Sigma}}_{g}^{+}$ energy levels to deviate from their thermal equilibrium abundances. We find that the resulting ${\mathrm{H}}_{2}$ abundance is ${10}^{\ensuremath{-}17}$ at $z=1200$ and ${10}^{\ensuremath{-}13}$ at $z=800$, which is too small to have any significant influence on the recombination history.

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