(c) (a) 3kT/2. Cascade

Similar documents
II. HII Regions (Ionization State)

Photoionized Gas Ionization Equilibrium

Emitted Spectrum Summary of emission processes Emissivities for emission lines: - Collisionally excited lines - Recombination cascades Emissivities

a few more introductory subjects : equilib. vs non-equil. ISM sources and sinks : matter replenishment, and exhaustion Galactic Energetics

AY230 Solutions #3. nv > max. n=1

Thermal Equilibrium in Nebulae 1. For an ionized nebula under steady conditions, heating and cooling processes that in

6. Interstellar Medium. Emission nebulae are diffuse patches of emission surrounding hot O and

Lec 3. Radiative Processes and HII Regions

Photoionization Modelling of H II Region for Oxygen Ions

The inverse process is recombination, and in equilibrium

Astrophysics of Gaseous Nebulae and Active Galactic Nuclei

M.Phys., M.Math.Phys., M.Sc. MTP Radiative Processes in Astrophysics and High-Energy Astrophysics

Lec. 4 Thermal Properties & Line Diagnostics for HII Regions

Notes on Photoionized Regions Wednesday, January 12, 2011

The Interstellar Medium

Giant Star-Forming Regions

Interstellar Astrophysics Summary notes: Part 2

AGN Physics of the Ionized Gas Physical conditions in the NLR Physical conditions in the BLR LINERs Emission-Line Diagnostics High-Energy Effects

Spectral Line Intensities - Boltzmann, Saha Eqs.

Interstellar Medium Physics

CHAPTER 22. Astrophysical Gases

7. Non-LTE basic concepts

The Stellar Opacity. F ν = D U = 1 3 vl n = 1 3. and that, when integrated over all energies,

Lecture 3: Emission and absorption

Gas 1: Molecular clouds

2. NOTES ON RADIATIVE TRANSFER The specific intensity I ν

Astro 201 Radiative Processes Problem Set 6. Due in class.

Astr 2310 Thurs. March 23, 2017 Today s Topics

Some HI is in reasonably well defined clouds. Motions inside the cloud, and motion of the cloud will broaden and shift the observed lines!

The physics of the interstellar medium. A. C. Raga, J. Cantó

Opacity and Optical Depth

Bremsstrahlung. Rybicki & Lightman Chapter 5. Free-free Emission Braking Radiation

If light travels past a system faster than the time scale for which the system evolves then t I ν = 0 and we have then

Radiative Transfer in a Clumpy Universe: the UVB. Piero Madau UC Santa Cruz

Theory of optically thin emission line spectroscopy

5. Atomic radiation processes

HII regions. Massive (hot) stars produce large numbers of ionizing photons (energy above 13.6 ev) which ionize hydrogen in the vicinity.

Effects of Massive Stars

7. Non-LTE basic concepts

Astrophysics with the Computer: Propagation of Ionization Fronts in Interstellar Gas

Astrophysical Exercises: Ionization Structure of an H II Region. Joachim Köppen Heidelberg 1991

Spontaneous Emission, Stimulated Emission, and Absorption

Calculating Radiative Recombination Continuum From a Hot Plasma

23 Astrophysics 23.5 Ionization of the Interstellar Gas near a Star

Components of Galaxies Gas The Importance of Gas

6. Stellar spectra. excitation and ionization, Saha s equation stellar spectral classification Balmer jump, H -

Astrophysics of Gaseous Nebulae

Model of Hydrogen Deficient Nebulae in H II Regions at High Temperature

6. Stellar spectra. excitation and ionization, Saha s equation stellar spectral classification Balmer jump, H -

3: Interstellar Absorption Lines: Radiative Transfer in the Interstellar Medium. James R. Graham University of California, Berkeley

Diffuse Interstellar Medium

Equilibrium Properties of Matter and Radiation

Class #4 11 September 2008

Collisional radiative model

Thermal Bremsstrahlung

Ay Fall 2004 Lecture 6 (given by Tony Travouillon)

Chapter 2 Bremsstrahlung and Black Body

Recombination onto Doubly-Ionized Carbon in M17

Astr 5465 March 6, 2018 Abundances in Late-type Galaxies Spectra of HII Regions Offer a High-Precision Means for Measuring Abundance (of Gas)

Physics and Chemistry of the Interstellar Medium

Giant Star-Forming Regions

Preliminary Examination: Astronomy

PHYS 231 Lecture Notes Week 3

The Birth Of Stars. How do stars form from the interstellar medium Where does star formation take place How do we induce star formation

6. Cosmology. (same at all points) probably true on a sufficiently large scale. The present. ~ c. ~ h Mpc (6.1)

Collisionally- excited emission Lines

Interstellar Medium and Star Birth

ν is the frequency, h = ergs sec is Planck s constant h S = = x ergs sec 2 π the photon wavelength λ = c/ν

The formation of stars and planets. Day 1, Topic 2: Radiation physics. Lecture by: C.P. Dullemond

Supernovae. Supernova basics Supernova types Light Curves SN Spectra after explosion Supernova Remnants (SNRs) Collisional Ionization

6. Stellar spectra. excitation and ionization, Saha s equation stellar spectral classification Balmer jump, H -

Lecture 2 Line Radiative Transfer for the ISM

ASTRONOMY QUALIFYING EXAM August Possibly Useful Quantities

AGN EMISSION LINES H.

Stars, Galaxies & the Universe Lecture Outline

AST242 LECTURE NOTES PART 7

X-ray Radiation, Absorption, and Scattering

t KH = GM2 RL Pressure Supported Core for a Massive Star Consider a dense core supported by pressure. This core must satisfy the equation:

Lecture 2 Interstellar Absorption Lines: Line Radiative Transfer

Lyman-alpha intensity mapping during the Epoch of Reionization

A 21 spontaneous radia:ve decay (s - 1 ) B 12 induced excita:on (via photons) [B 12 U ν s - 1 ]

Photodissociation Regions Radiative Transfer. Dr. Thomas G. Bisbas

Stellar atmospheres: an overview

The Diffuse ISM Friday, February 11, 2011

Plasma Astrophysics Chapter 1: Basic Concepts of Plasma. Yosuke Mizuno Institute of Astronomy National Tsing-Hua University

Accretion Disks. 1. Accretion Efficiency. 2. Eddington Luminosity. 3. Bondi-Hoyle Accretion. 4. Temperature profile and spectrum of accretion disk

Atomic Physics 3 ASTR 2110 Sarazin

The Classification of Stellar Spectra Chapter 8

AG Draconis. A high density plasma laboratory. Dr Peter Young Collaborators A.K. Dupree S.J. Kenyon B. Espey T.B.

SPECTROSCOPY OF THE EXTENDED ORION NEBULA. A Thesis. Submitted to the Graduate Faculty. Fisk University. Department of Physics. Jessica Anne Harris

Lecture Notes: Basic Equations

Some fundamentals. Statistical mechanics. The non-equilibrium ISM. = g u

Astrochemistry. Lecture 10, Primordial chemistry. Jorma Harju. Department of Physics. Friday, April 5, 2013, 12:15-13:45, Lecture room D117

Example: model a star using a two layer model: Radiation starts from the inner layer as blackbody radiation at temperature T in. T out.

Chapter 10 The Interstellar Medium

Physics of the Interstellar and Intergalactic Medium: Problems for Students

Gas Cooling As the temperature changes the ions responsible for cooling change as do the physical processes l o the case of g

Theory of Interstellar Phases

Properties of Electromagnetic Radiation Chapter 5. What is light? What is a wave? Radiation carries information

Collisionally Excited Spectral Lines (Cont d) Diffuse Universe -- C. L. Martin

Transcription:

1 AY30-HIITemp IV. Temperature of HII Regions A. Motivations B. History In star-forming galaxies, most of the heating + cooling occurs within HII regions Heating occurs via the UV photons from O and B stars Cooling occurs via dust and line-emission Epochal series of papers: Spitzer 1948, 1949ab, 1954 Summary: Burbidge, Gould, & Pottasch 1963 Ostriker, Chapter 3 C. Heating: Basics Heating occurs by photoionization of incident (stellar) radiation in the Lyman continuum Photoionization only occurs if there is an H 0 atom in the region Ultimately, we require recombination (c) n=! (a) 3kT/ n=3 n= Cascade h!* > h!0 Figure (b)

AY30-HIITemp Because σn rec (v) 1/v, electrons with energy f 3 kt are more likely to recombine (f 0.5). This releases a cascade of photons. The neutral HI atom is ionized by a hard photon hν > h The heating is recombination driven (a) > (b) > (c) The gas is heated by If hν < h + f 3 kt, the gas is cooled! Are the electrons in kinematic equilibrium? E = E f E i = (hν h ) f 3 kt (1) Consider the e e relaxation time Strong collisions occur when e r 1 mv () The cross-section for such a collision is ( ) e σ ee πr π (3) mv Mean free path Relaxation time λ 1 σ ee n e (4) t ee λ e m 1 e ( kt ) 3 0.9 T 3 s (5) v e n e e 4 n e Therefore, the electrons form a Maxwellian distribution How about the protons? t pp ( mp m e Are the protons and electrons coupled? ) 1 tee 43t ee (6) Equipartition time Only a fraction of energy (m e /m p ) is exchanged during e p collisions All of these time-scales are short compared to t rec 10 5 yrs D. Heating of Hydrogen G(T ) :: Heating rate (erg cm 3 /s) t ep 1836t ee (7)

3 AY30-HIITemp Start by ignoring the diffuse radiation { n e n p G(T ) = n e n p < σ n (v)v > Max [ < hν > h ] } < σ n v 1 mv > Max The latter term is related to f 3 kt Define: <E> = [ < hν > h ] (9) Now consider the diffuse ionizing radiation Let s try an on-the-spot assumption n e n p G(T ) = < σ n v > Max <E> < σ n v 1 mv > Max + n= n= { < σ 1 v > Max <E> d < σ 1 v 1 mv > Max } (8) But, the On-the-spot approximation implies {} = 0 And this ignores the fact that some electrons that cascade to the ground state are ionized by the diffuse radiation field where < hν > d < hν >! We need a different approach A Self-consistent solution (or close to it): Consider the photoionization point of view Energy in: n HI Γ <E> +n HI Γ d <E> d (10) Now we need to solve for Γ and Γ d Of course, we have (from our on-the-spot approx): Consider Γ Photoionization by starlight/s Assume τ ν 1 Local density of ionizing photons is n HI Γ = n eα B (T ) {Stromgren} (11) n HI Γ d = n eα 1 (T ) {on the spot} (1) F ν = πb ν4πr 4πr e τν = L ν 4πr e τν (13) Therefore n HI Γ = 0 n γ = F ν chν n HI L ν (14) 1 dν 4πr c hν c σph (ν) (15)

4 AY30-HIITemp Finally, L ν L ν e τν with τ ν defined as always But, we can actually estimate the heating rate without calculating Γ explicitly Replace Γ with the recombination rate n HI Γ <E> +n HI Γ d <E> d = n eα B <E> +n eα 1 <E> d (16) For a highly ionized gas n p = n e We infer the total heating rate { Define <E> n eg(t ) = n e α B <E> +α 1 <E> d < } σ n (v)v 1 mv > Max We are left to evaluate <E>, <E> d, < σ n v 1 mv > Max <E>=< hν h >= <E>= Calculate <E> for a star (blackbody) total K.E. of ejected electrons total number of photoionizations n HI (hν h ) uνdν hν n HI u ν B ν u νdν hν σph ν ν 3 e hν/kt 1 σph ν Assume τ ν = 0 (no attenuation of stellar radiation) Approximate ( ) 3 ν = σ 0 σ ph ν (17) (18) (19) (0) (1) Substitute variables Express <E> = ( h 1 ) ν 3 dν ν e hν/kt 1 ν 3 ν3 1 e hν/kt 1 ν () dν ν 3 y hν kt β = h kt = 158000K T (3) <E> = kt β β dy e y 1 dy y(e y 1) β kt ψ(β ) (4)

5 AY30-HIITemp To evaluate the integrals: Expand the denominator 1 e y 1 = e y 1 e = ( y e y 1 + e y + e y +... ) (5) = e ny (6) Uniformly convergent series can be integrated term by term ψ(β ) = = e ny dy β β (7) e ny dy/y β 1 n e nβ β (8) E 1 (nβ ) Leading terms ψ(β ) 1 1 β +... (9) Table 1: Evaluation of ψ(β ) T /10 4 β ψ(β ) 10.5 1.5 0.686 5.7 3.0 0.808 3.16 5.0 0.868 0.8 0.0 0.95 Now calculate <E> d for the diffuse heating (hν h )j ph νd σph ν <E> d = 0 ν1dν j ph νd σph 1ν dν (30) Photon emissivity :: j ph d j ph d 1 ν e hν/kt (31) σ ph 1 is the photoionization cross-section to n = 1

6 AY30-HIITemp Substitute: β h /kt <E> d = kt β E 3(β) E 4 (β) E 4 (β) kt ξ(β) (3) ξ(β) 1 4 β +... (β > 1) (33) Finally, the loss of energy by electron recombination < σ n (v)v 1 mv > Max = m el 3 π 0 σ n (v)v 5 e Lv dv (34) L = m/kt f(v) = (4/ π)l 3 v e Lv Define β = h /kt, A = ( 5 /3 3/ )α 3 πa B < σ n (v)v 1 mv > Max = ma β { β 1 βn ( ) } βn πl 3 n 3 eβ/n E 1 The sum is written as χ(β) Using the E-M sum rule: (e.g. BGP63) χ(β) 1 [ 0.735 + ln β + 1 ] (3β) (35) (36) Table : Evaluation of χ(β) T/10 4 β χ(β) 15.8 1 0.53 7.9 0.80 3.16 5 1.1 1.00 10.5 1.56 0.8 0 1.87 0.31 50.3 Altogether now! G(T ) = α B <E> +α 1 <E> d < σ n (v)v 1 mv > Max (erg cm 3 /s) (37) ( ) hν0 = α B (T )kt ψ + α 1 (T )kt ξ kt ( hν0 kt ) Am ( ) e βχ hν0 πl 3 kt (38)

7 AY30-HIITemp Approximations of the recombination coefficients And the integrals α B.6010 13 ( T 10 4 ) 0.8 cm 3 ( ) 0.55 T α 1 1.5710 13 cm 3 10 4 s s (39) (40) ψ(β ) 1 1 β (41) ξ(β) 1 4/β (4) χ(β) 1 [ 0.735 ln β 1/3β ] (43) Figure 10 G(T) (10 5 ergs cm 3 /s) 8 6 4 0 T * = 100,000K T * = 30,000K T * = 10,000K 4 1 3 4 5 6 T HII (10 4 K) E. Cooling: Collisional Excitation of Hydrogen Key excitation process Also 1 S P (44) Followed by emission of Lyα photon with λ = 115.67Å(10.eV) Dominant coolant for gas with T 10 4 5 K Emission of photons A 1 S,1 S = 8.3 s 1 (vs. A Lyα 10 9 s 1 ) hν + hν = 10. ev Cross-section 1 S S (45)

8 AY30-HIITemp σhi ex is not simply proportional to v It is complicated, in particular, by wiggles due to resonances Fig Collision strengths: See Table 3.1 in Osterbrock Amazingly, accurate cross-sections are not available for n > 3 Line emissivity (see RadProc notes) F. Cooling: Collisional Excitation of Heavy Elements Definitions n (m) k f (m) k,j = Number density of element m in k th ionization state = Fraction of the ion in level j Cooling from element m in k th ionization state from level j i [ ] L (m) k,ij = n en (m) k f (m) ki q ij f (m) kj q ji (46) Total cooling rate L line (T ) = m L (m) k,ij (47) We will return to line emission from heavy elements as a means to probe the physical conditions within HII regions G. Cooling: Brehmstrahlung (a.k.a. Free-free emission) For a (nearly) full quantum treatment, see http://www.ucolick.org/ xavier/ay04b/lectures/ay04b phtrec.ps k j>i

9 AY30-HIITemp A semi-classical, heuristic treatment is given in the RadProc notes Astrophysics Dominant cooling process at high T (e.g. cluster gas) Means of diagnosing the T in HII regions Quantum result ḡ ff is the Gaunt factor ḡ ff = 1 for most frequencies Finally, ḡ ff = I = 4 π 3ḡff(ν)e hν/kt (48) { ( 3 π ln 4kT 0.577 ) hν kt hν 1 hν kt (49) j ff ν = i n i n e ( me 3πkT ) 1 [ 3π Z i e 6 3m ec 3 ] g ff (ν)e hν/kt (50) Radio Frequency Brehmstrahlung (i.e. HII Regions) The log term in j ν introduces a weak, power-law frequency dependence ( ) j ν = 6.51 10 38 ne n i Zi T 0.35 ν 0.1 (51) For fully ionized H, He the sum is 1.4n e Contrast with X-ray Brehmstrahlung Total Bolometric free-free emission ε ff = 4π HII region with T 10 4 K j ν = 7.6 10 31 n et 1 e hν/kt g x (5) g x = { (0.551 + 0.68x) ln(.5/x) x 1 x 0.4 x 1 (53) x hν/kt (54) j ff ν dν (55) =.4 10 7 T 1 n e (56) ε ff 10 5 n e (57)

10 AY30-HIITemp Compare with H line emission (or even [OIII]) Diagnosing HII Regions ε H 10 4 n e ε ff (58) Specific flux from a thermal radio source at distance R F ν = 1 4πj 4πR ν dv (59) =.5 103 R pc.1 GHz n e dv pc T 0.35 Jy (60) Observe the radio flux to infer: (a) n edv =<n e> if T is known (or assumed) (b) Ionizing photon density φ = n eα B (T )dv α B (T ) n edv (61) α B (T )F ν R T 0.35 (6) (c) Interstellar reddening: Ratio of free-free flux to Hβ is independent of R and <n e> and insensitive to T H. Temperature Profile Equate heating with cooling Balance and solve for T Approximate value G(T ) = L R (T ) + L line (T ) + L ff (63) x = 0.9, solar abundances Figure Heating curve is G(T ) L R (T ) Free-free, collision excitation of HI is small Line radiation Peaks when kt χ Decreases slowly for kt > χ Equilibrium T is where the combined curve (not labeled) crosses the heating curve

11 AY30-HIITemp Temperature profile Need to iteratively solve for ionization balance and the T together And perform Radiative Transfer! CLOUDY: Gary Ferland and Associates CLOUDY Example Input file c hii_typical.in title typical HII region sphere c 05 star with temperature 4000=10**4.63 K radius 10**11.9cm blackbody 4.63, radius=11.9 c gas density in log of number density of all protons hden = c log of starting radius r_cm radius 17 stop temperature 3 plot continuum range 0.1 iterations = 3 print last iteration punch overview last file= hii_typical.ovr Solution

1 AY30-HIITemp Discussion Red curve: Solar metallicity Blue curve: Zero metallicity We note T as r This is because σν ph ν 3 Therefore the radiation field becomes harder as it propogates out This leads to more efficient heating (similiar to a hotter star) 4.5 10 0 4.0 10 log T e 3.5 10 4 (1 x) 3.0 10 6.5 15 16 17 18 19 log depth=(r 10 17 ) 10 8