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Clouds interstellar

Herbst E 1987 Gas phase chemical processes in molecular clouds Interstellar Prooesses ed D J Hollenbach and H A Tronson (Dordrecht Reidel) pp 611-29... [Pg.794]

Stars form from collapsing interstellar gas and dust clouds. Interstellar dust also provides the raw material from which planets form. Under favorable conditions, i.e. low temperatures, the interstellar dust may survive processing in protoplanetary disks and later planetary metamorphism, e.g. in asteroids and comets. By far the... [Pg.27]

In this section, the wide diversity of teclmiques used to explore ion chemistry and ion structure will be outlined and a sampling of the applications of ion chemistry will be given in studies of lamps, lasers, plasma processing, ionospheres and interstellar clouds. [Pg.798]

Several instniments have been developed for measuring kinetics at temperatures below that of liquid nitrogen [81]. Liquid helium cooled drift tubes and ion traps have been employed, but this apparatus is of limited use since most gases freeze at temperatures below about 80 K. Molecules can be maintained in the gas phase at low temperatures in a free jet expansion. The CRESU apparatus (acronym for the French translation of reaction kinetics at supersonic conditions) uses a Laval nozzle expansion to obtain temperatures of 8-160 K. The merged ion beam and molecular beam apparatus are described above. These teclmiques have provided important infonnation on reactions pertinent to interstellar-cloud chemistry as well as the temperature dependence of reactions in a regime not otherwise accessible. In particular, infonnation on ion-molecule collision rates as a ftmction of temperature has proven valuable m refining theoretical calculations. [Pg.813]

The astrochemistty of ions may be divided into topics of interstellar clouds, stellar atmospheres, planetary atmospheres and comets. There are many areas of astrophysics (stars, planetary nebulae, novae, supemovae) where highly ionized species are important, but beyond the scope of ion chemistry . (Still, molecules, including H2O, are observed in solar spectra [155] and a surprise in the study of Supernova 1987A was the identification of molecular species, CO, SiO and possibly ITf[156. 157]. ) In the early universe, after expansion had cooled matter to the point that molecules could fonn, the small fraction of positive and negative ions that remained was crucial to the fomiation of molecules, for example [156]... [Pg.819]

Interstellar clouds of gases contain mostly H, H2 and He, but the minority species are responsible for the interesting chemistry that takes place, just as in the earth s atmosphere. Interstellar clouds are divided into two... [Pg.819]

In the dense interstellar medium characteristic of sites of star fonuation, for example, scattering of visible/UV light by sub-micron-sized dust grains makes molecular clouds optically opaque and lowers their internal temperature to only a few tens of Kelvin. The thenual radiation from such objects therefore peaks in the FIR and only becomes optically thin at even longer wavelengths. Rotational motions of small molecules and rovibrational transitions of larger species and clusters thus provide, in many cases, the only or the most powerfiil probes of the dense, cold gas and dust of the interstellar medium. [Pg.1233]

To date, researchers have identified more than 100 different molecules, composed of up to 13 atoms, in the interstellar medium [16]. Most were initially detected at microwave and (sub)millimetre frequencies, and the discoveries have reached far beyond the mere existence of molecules. Newly discovered entities such as difhise mterstellar clouds, dense (or dark) molecular clouds and giant molecular cloud complexes were characterized for the first time. Indeed, radioastronomy (which includes observations ranging from radio to submillunetre frequencies) has dramatically changed our perception of the composition of the universe. Radioastronomy has shown that most of the mass in the interstellar medium is contained in so-called dense... [Pg.1240]

Sometimes a star explodes in a supernova cast mg debris into interstellar space This debris includes the elements formed during the life of the star and these elements find their way into new stars formed when a cloud of matter collapses in on itself Our own sun is believed to be a second generation star one formed not only from hydrogen and helium but containing the elements formed in earlier stars as well... [Pg.6]

Identification of a molecule known in the laboratory is usually unambiguous because of the uniqueness of the highly precise transition frequencies. However, before frequencies detected in the interstellar medium can be compared with laboratory frequencies they must be corrected for the Doppler effect (see Section 2.3.2) due to the motion of the clouds. In Sagittarius B2 the molecules are found to be travelling fairly uniformly with a velocity of... [Pg.120]

For any nucHde that decays only by this electron capture process, if one were to produce an atom in which all of the electrons were removed, the effective X would become infinite. An interesting example of this involves the decay of Mn in interstellar space. For its normal electron cloud, Mn decays with a half-life of 312 d and this decay is by electron capture over 99.99% of the time. The remaining decays are less than 0.0000006% by j3 -decay and a possible branch of less than 0.0003% by /5 -decay. In interstellar space some Mn atoms have all of their electrons stripped off so they can only decay by these particle emissions, and therefore their effective half-life is greater than 3 x 10 yr. [Pg.446]

C05-0108. Moiecular clouds composed mostly of hydrogen molecules have been detected in interstellar space. The molecular density in these clouds is ab What is the pressure in such a cloud ... [Pg.344]

The rotational spectrum has been calculated accuratly by ab-initio methods [2], and has been measured in the laboratory with high precision [3,4], so that the radio detection of C3H2can be done without ambiguity, encouraging its search in different environments as dense dark clouds [5], diffuse interstellar medium [6] or Hll regions [7]. [Pg.401]

There are, however, still some unsolved, important questions103 about this fundamental reaction, of great relevance in dense interstellar clouds, where it could well be the source of the C3H and C3 species detected there. These unsolved questions are (a) what is the branching ratio for formation of the two isomeric C3H species, Z-C3H and C-C3H, and how does it vary with Ec (b) How do the detailed reaction dynamics and the branching ratio for C3H and C3 formation vary with Ec ... [Pg.372]

The darkness associated with dense interstellar clouds is caused by dust particles of size =0.1 microns, which are a common ingredient in interstellar and circum-stellar space, taking up perhaps 1% of the mass of interstellar clouds with a fractional number density of 10-12. These particles both scatter and absorb external visible and ultraviolet radiation from stars, protecting molecules in dense clouds from direct photodissociation via external starlight. They are rather less protective in the infrared, and are quite transparent in the microwave.6 The chemical nature of the dust particles is not easy to ascertain compared with the chemical nature of the interstellar gas broad spectral features in the infrared have been interpreted in terms of core-mantle particles, with the cores consisting of two populations, one of silicates and one of carbonaceous, possibly graphitic material. The mantles, which appear to be restricted to dense clouds, are probably a mixture of ices such as water, carbon monoxide, and methanol.7... [Pg.4]

The first question to ask about the formation of interstellar molecules is where the formation occurs. There are two possibilities the molecules are formed within the clouds themselves or they are formed elsewhere. As an alternative to local formation, one possibility is that the molecules are synthesized in the expanding envelopes of old stars, previously referred to as circumstellar clouds. Both molecules and dust particles are known to form in such objects, and molecular development is especially efficient in those objects that are carbon-rich (elemental C > elemental O) such as the well-studied source IRC+10216.12 Chemical models of carbon-rich envelopes show that acetylene is produced under high-temperature thermodynamic equilibrium conditions and that as the material cools and flows out of the star, a chemistry somewhat akin to an acetylene discharge takes place, perhaps even forming molecules as complex as PAHs.13,14 As to the contribution of such chemistry to the interstellar medium, however, all but the very large species will be photodissociated rapidly by the radiation field present in interstellar space once the molecules are blown out of the protective cocoon of the stellar envelope in which they are formed. Consequently, the material flowing out into space will consist mainly of atoms, dust particles, and possibly PAHs that are relatively immune to radiation because of their size and stability. It is therefore necessary for the observed interstellar molecules to be produced locally. [Pg.5]

The first step in interstellar chemistry is the production of diatomic molecules, notably molecular hydrogen. Observations of atomic hydrogen in dense clouds show that this species cannot be detected except in a diffuse halo surrounding the cloud, so that an efficient conversion of H into H2 is necessary. In the gas phase this might be accomplished by the radiative association reaction,... [Pg.6]

The reactants in 20 can also produce the higher energy isomer HOC+, which is detected in dense interstellar clouds,37 albeit with a lower abundance than HCO+ due mainly to the catalytic reaction,... [Pg.9]

The above examples should suffice to show how ion-molecule, dissociative recombination, and neutral-neutral reactions combine to form a variety of small species. Once neutral species are produced, they are destroyed by ion-molecule and neutral-neutral reactions. Stable species such as water and ammonia are depleted only via ion-molecule reactions. The dominant reactive ions in model calculations are the species HCO+, H3, H30+, He+, C+, and H+ many of then-reactions have been studied in the laboratory.41 Radicals such as OH can also be depleted via neutral-neutral reactions with atoms (see reactions 13, 15, 16) and, according to recent measurements, by selected reactions with stable species as well.18 Another loss mechanism in interstellar clouds is adsorption onto dust particles. Still another is photodestruction caused by ultraviolet photons produced when secondary electrons from cosmic ray-induced ionization excite H2, which subsequently fluoresces.42... [Pg.10]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.56 , Pg.106 , Pg.109 , Pg.124 , Pg.168 , Pg.229 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.3 ]




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