Abstract

Context. Shocks are ubiquitous in the interstellar and intergalactic media, where their chemical and radiative signatures reveal the physical conditions in which they arise. Detailed astrochemical models of shocks at all velocities are necessary to understand the physics of many environments including protostellar outflows, supernova remnants, and galactic outflows. Aims. We present an accurate treatment of the self-generated ultraviolet (UV) radiation in models of intermediate velocity (VS = 25–60 km s−1), stationary, weakly magnetised, J-type, molecular shocks. We show how these UV photons modify the structure and chemical properties of shocks and quantify how the initial mechanical energy is reprocessed into line emission. Methods. We develop an iterative scheme to calculate the self-consistent UV radiation field produced by molecular shocks. The shock solutions computed with the Paris–Durham shock code are post-processed using a multi-level accelerated Λ-iteration radiative transfer algorithm to compute Lyman α, Lyman β, and two-photon continuum emission. The subsequent impacts of these photons on the ionisation and dissociation of key atomic and molecular species as well as on the heating by the photoelectric effect are calculated by taking the wavelength dependent interaction cross-sections and the fluid velocity profile into account. This leads to an accurate description of the propagation of photons and the thermochemical properties of the gas in both the postshock region and in the material ahead of the shock called the radiative precursor. With this new treatment, we analyse a grid of shock models with velocities in the range VS = 25–60 km s−1, propagating in dense (nH ≥ 104 cm−3) and shielded gas. Results. Self-absorption traps Lyα photons in a small region in the shock, though a large fraction of this emission escapes by scattering into the line wings. We find a critical velocity VS ~ 30 km s−1 above which shocks generate Lyα emission with a photon flux exceeding the flux of the standard interstellar radiation field. The escaping photons generate a warm slab of gas (T ~ 100 K) ahead of the shock front as well as pre-ionising C and S. Intermediate velocity molecular shocks are traced by bright emission of many atomic fine structure (e.g. O and S) and metastable (e.g. O and C) lines, substantive molecular emission (e.g. H2, OH, and CO), enhanced column densities of several species including CH+ and HCO+, as well as a severe destruction of H2O. As much as 13–21% of the initial kinetic energy of the shock escapes in Lyα and Lyβ photons if the dust opacity in the radiative precursor allows it. Conclusions. A rich molecular emission is produced by interstellar shocks regardless of the input mechanical energy. Atomic and molecular lines reprocess the quasi totality of the kinetic energy, allowing for the connection of observable emission to the driving source for that emission.

Highlights

  • Shocks are the fingerprints of the dynamical state and evolution of the interstellar medium

  • Building on the recent updates of Lesaffre et al (2013) and Godard et al (2019) who focused on low velocity shocks (Vs 25 km s−1) irradiated by an external radiation field, we explore here an intermediate velocity range (25 km s−1 Vs 60 km s−1) where shocks are hot enough to generate significant UV radiation, yet cool enough to prevent the production of multi-ionised species

  • Radiative precursor and postshock extension After computing the radiation field within the shock with the Accelerated Lambda Iteration (ALI) method, we extend the radiation into the preshock by solving the Radiative Transfer Equation (RTE) with the intensity at the shock front as a boundary condition

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Summary

Introduction

Shocks are the fingerprints of the dynamical state and evolution of the interstellar medium. Molecular lines in galactic outflows are found with velocity dispersions in excess of 1000 km s−1, which can be seen as the signature of powerful turbulence generated by galactic winds (Falgarone et al 2017) All of these examples reinforce the need for sophisticated and publicly accessible models capable of following the complex chemical and thermal evolution of shocks, down to the viscous scale, in a variety of physical conditions and for different input of mechanical energy. By using the UV field calculated by a specialised atomic shock code, they were able to make an extensive study of shocks over both low and high densities (vnel=oc1it0ie–s10(V9 scm=−235).–T15h0is km s−1) and a broad range of work thoroughly detailed the key physical processes – such as photoionisation and dissociation, formation of H2 on dust, cooling from both atoms and molecules – which determine the structure and radiative characteristics of shocks in these environments. We run the shock code again in the presence of this radiation field and repeat until convergence

J-type shocks
Photoreactions
Atomic hydrogen parameters
Accelerated lambda iteration
Two-photon emission
Results
Critical velocity
Column densities
Conclusion
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