Astrochimistry Spring 2013 Lecture 4: Interstellar PAHs NGC HST

Similar documents
Chemical Enrichment of the ISM by Stellar Ejecta

ANALYZING ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATIONS WITH THE NASA AMES PAH DATABASE

8: Composition and Physical state of Interstellar Dust

Astrochemistry (2) Interstellar extinction. Measurement of the reddening

Christine Joblin Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie Université de Toulouse [UPS] CNRS

Astrochimistry Spring 2013

Interstellar Dust and Extinction

Lecture 5. Interstellar Dust: Chemical & Thermal Properties

arxiv: v1 [astro-ph.ga] 29 Jun 2011

Astronomy. Astrophysics. Evolution of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in photodissociation regions. Hydrogenation and charge states

The Interstellar Medium in Galaxies: SOFIA Science

Lecture 18 - Photon Dominated Regions

INDEX OF SUBJECTS 6, 14, 23, 50, 95, 191 4, 191, 234

Laser Dissociation of Protonated PAHs

Beyond the Visible -- Exploring the Infrared Universe

Gas 1: Molecular clouds

Photodissociation Regions Radiative Transfer. Dr. Thomas G. Bisbas

Interstellar Medium and Star Birth

Aromatic Features in M101 HII Regions and Starburst Galaxies

Physics and Chemistry of the Interstellar Medium

Chapter 10 The Interstellar Medium

Midterm Results. The Milky Way in the Infrared. The Milk Way from Above (artist conception) 3/2/10

Giant Star-Forming Regions

ASTR2050 Spring Please turn in your homework now! In this class we will discuss the Interstellar Medium:

Exploring ISM dust with IRSIS. Emmanuel DARTOIS IAS-CNRS

Astr 2310 Thurs. March 23, 2017 Today s Topics

Astronomy 106, Fall September 2015

Relaxation of energized PAHs

Dust in the Diffuse Universe

Astrochemistry the summary

Astrophysics of Gaseous Nebulae and Active Galactic Nuclei

H 2 O and CO Ices in Protostellar Environments Recent Keck Telescope Results. Adwin Boogert California Inst. of Technology. Interstellar Ices-I

Class 3. The PAH Spectrum, what does it tell us??

The Interstellar Medium

Dust. The four letter word in astrophysics. Interstellar Emission

A SMALL FULLERENE (C 24 ) MAY BE THE CARRIER OF THE 11.2 MICRON UNIDENTIFIED INFRARED BAND

Cosmic Evolution, Part II. Heavy Elements to Molecules

LABORATORY SPECTROSCOPY OF PROTONATED PAH MOLECULES RELEVANT FOR INTERSTELLAR CHEMISTRY

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

The Interstellar Medium

Status of the Diffuse Interstellar Band Problem

Stars, Galaxies & the Universe Lecture Outline

Clicker Question: Clicker Question: What is the expected lifetime for a G2 star (one just like our Sun)?

Interstellar Medium. Alain Abergel. IAS, Université Paris-Sud, Orsay Cedex, France

arxiv:astro-ph/ v1 9 Feb 2000

kev e - and H + ECR source Shock wave Molecular ices 3 C 2 H 2 C 6 H 6 2 C 3 H 3 Dust impact Europa

LECTURE NOTES. Ay/Ge 132 ATOMIC AND MOLECULAR PROCESSES IN ASTRONOMY AND PLANETARY SCIENCE. Geoffrey A. Blake. Fall term 2016 Caltech

The Dusty Universe. Joe Weingartner George Mason University Dept of Physics and Astronomy

A100 Exploring the Universe: The Milky Way as a Galaxy. Martin D. Weinberg UMass Astronomy

A World of Dust. Bare-Eye Nebula: Orion. Interstellar Medium

Cosmic Evolution, Part II. Heavy Elements to Molecules

Protonated Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons and the Interstellar Medium

The Physics of the Interstellar Medium

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 Interstellar Medium (ch. 18)

Possible Extra Credit Option

Universe Now. 9. Interstellar matter and star clusters

Chapter 4. Spectroscopy. Dr. Tariq Al-Abdullah

Lecture 18 Long Wavelength Spectroscopy

Excited States Calculations for Protonated PAHs

Energy. mosquito lands on your arm = 1 erg. Firecracker = 5 x 10 9 ergs. 1 stick of dynamite = 2 x ergs. 1 ton of TNT = 4 x ergs

Interstellar Chemistry

The 158 Micron [C II] Line: A Measure of Global Star Formation Activity in Galaxies Stacey et al. (1991) ApJ, 373, 423

Life of stars, formation of elements

Radio astronomy, Lecture 14

First studies for cold stars under the hyphotesis of TE : Russell (1934) Fujita (1939, 1940, 1941)

Extrasolar Planets: Molecules and Disks

Simulating chemistry on interstellar dust grains in the laboratory

Unscrambling the Egg. Yvonne Pendleton NASA Ames Research Center. JWST Workshop Nov. 14, 2017

The formation of super-stellar clusters

Astrophysical Quantities

R. D. Gehrz a E. E. Becklin b, and Göran Sandell b

The ionisation state of PAHs in interstellar environments

Stellar Life Cycle in Giant Galactic Nebula NGC edited by David L. Alles Western Washington University

Physics 224 The Interstellar Medium

Lecture 6: Molecular Transitions (1) Astrochemistry

The Stars. Chapter 14

Comparison between 30 micron sources in different galaxies

A. G. G. M. TIELENS SRON, Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, P.O. Box 800, 9700 AV Groningen, The Netherlands

Lecture 14 Organic Chemistry 1

arxiv: v1 [astro-ph] 7 Feb 2008

Stellar Life Cycle in Giant Galactic Nebula NGC 3603

The Ṁass- loss of Red Supergiants

Physical Processes in Astrophysics

Fullerenes and PAHs: from laboratory to the detection in interstellar space

Galactic dust in the Herschel and Planck era. François Boulanger Institut d Astrophysique Spatiale

Lecture 6 - spectroscopy

Lecture 5. Interstellar Dust: Optical Properties

E. Rauls. Department of Theoretical Physics, Faculty of Natural Sciences, University of Paderborn, D Paderborn, Germany;

11/6/18. Today in Our Galaxy (Chap 19)

Atoms and Spectroscopy

5) What spectral type of star that is still around formed longest ago? 5) A) F B) A C) M D) K E) O

Dark Matter. ASTR 333/433 Spring Today Stars & Gas. essentials about stuff we can see. First Homework on-line Due Feb. 4

Quantum Chemistry. NC State University. Lecture 5. The electronic structure of molecules Absorption spectroscopy Fluorescence spectroscopy

Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon from the Magellanic Clouds

Understanding the chemistry of AGB circumstellar envelopes through the study of IRC

The Formation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Space

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

A Far-ultraviolet Fluorescent Molecular Hydrogen Emission Map of the Milky Way Galaxy

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

Transcription:

Astrochimistry Spring 2013 Lecture 4: Interstellar PAHs NGC 7023 - HST Julien Montillaud 8th February 2013

Outline I. From Unidentified to Aromatic Infrared Bands (7 p.) I.1 Historical background I.2 Observational evidence I.3 The PAH hypothesis II. General properties of chemical PAHs (9 p.) II.1 Overview of the PAH family II.2 Electronic properties II.3 Vibrational properties III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs (15 p.) III.1 Observational evidence III.2 Dissociation of PAHs III.3 Reactivity of PAHs III.4 Formation of PAHs IV. Influence of PAHs on the ISM evolution (3 p.) IV.1 Extinction curve IV.2 Photoelectric effect IV.3 Formation of H2 V. Summary VI. Some bibliographic references 2

I. From Unidentified to Aromatic Infrared Bands I.1 Historical background Gillett et al. (1967): IR excess in the?? range compared to free-free radio continuum extrapolation Russell et al. (1977): unidentified IR bands at 3.3, 3.4, 6.2, 7.7, 8.6 & 11.3 µm from reflection nebulea Duley & Williams (1981): notice the match between some PAH spectral features and UIBs Sellgren et al. (1983): near IR emission from reflection nebulae inconsistant with UV-photons thermally excited dust grains => transient heating of small particles? Léger & Puget (1984): the first first attribution of UIBs to PAHs (transient heating excitation model) Allamandola, Tielens & Barker (1985): the second first attribution of UIBs to PAHs (non thermal excitation model) Désert et al. (1990): global model of dust grains including PAHs 1990': first big experiments and detailed theoretical models + Infrared Space Observatory era 2000': multiplication of experiments and detailed models + Spitzer Space Telescope era 3

I. From Unidentified to Aromatic Infrared Bands I.2 Observational evidence NGC 7023 4

I. From Unidentified to Aromatic Infrared Bands I.2 Observational evidence HII region Edge of molecular cloud NGC 7023 5 Proto-planetary nebula Planetary nebula

I. From Unidentified to Aromatic Infrared Bands I.2 Observational evidence Band positions: typical of C-H and C-C stretches or bends in aromatic material Plateaux at short wavelength: High temperature, small species Simple reasoning: Plateau up to ~3.4 µm T~1000 K (black body approx.) 1 photon @ E=10 ev Cv=3kN=E/T => N=39 atoms Possible reading: Sellgren (1984) 6

I. From Unidentified to Aromatic Infrared Bands I.3 The PAH hypothesis Astrophysical PAH = carrier of the Aromatic Infrared Bands PAH = polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon chemical PAH = one model for astrophysical PAH Other models are reasonnable Graphitic grains/ PAH clusters Free flying PAH molecules Hydrogenated amorphos carbon 7

I. From Unidentified to Aromatic Infrared Bands I.3 The PAH hypothesis Still no individual spectroscopic identification Kokkin et al. 2008 Pilleri et al. 2009 Pilleri et al. 2009 Not symmetric permanent electric dipole strong rotational emission Undetected in Red Rectangle in the millimetric range (1 3mm) at IRAM-30m Electronic transition in the visible 8

I. From Unidentified to Aromatic Infrared Bands I.3 The PAH hypothesis Related detections Fullerene C60: not a PAH, but very close Also: - C70 - C6H6 9

II. General properties of chemical PAHs I. From Unidentified to Aromatic Infrared Bands II. General properties of chemical PAHs II.1 Overview of the PAH family II.2 Electronic properties II.3 Vibrational properties III. Grain-catalyzed formation of H2 IV. From processes to interstellar H2 formation rate V. Summary 10

II. General properties of chemical PAHs II.1 Overview of the PAH family 5-cycles Catacondensed Irregular Pericondensed 11

II. General properties of chemical PAHs II.2 Electronic properties Electron delocalization (=resonance) and aromaticity Molecular orbitals = combination of atomic orbitals original p-atomic orbitals Images from Paula Yurkanis Bruice, Cleveland, OH http://wps.prenhall.com/wps/media/objects/724/741576/chapter_07.html Resulting molecular (delocalized) orbital Electrostatic potential map of benzene 12

II. General properties of chemical PAHs II.2 Electronic properties Electron delocalization (=resonance) and aromaticity Bonding MO: constructive (in-phase) overlap Antibonding MO: destructive (out-of-phase) overlap 13

II. General properties of chemical PAHs II.2 Electronic properties Electron delocalization (=resonance) and aromaticity n(e) = 4n+2 => extra stabilisation (aromatic) n(e) = 4n => extra de-stabilisation (anti-aromatic) n(e) = 4n+1 or 4n+3 => nothing special NB: - changing the charge changes the aromaticity - changing the number of H-atoms changes the aromaticity 14 Le Page et al. 2001

II. General properties of chemical PAHs II.2 Electronic properties Ionization potential Empirical classical model: PAH = thin conducting disk Reasonable agreement with detailed quantum calculations (Density Functional Theory) Z=1 Z=2 Malloci et al. 2007 15

II. General properties of chemical PAHs II.2 Electronic properties Extinction curve Visible UV * Lyman cut (13.6 ev) Electronic spectrum * * * 16

II. General properties of chemical PAHs II.2 Electronic properties Electronic spectrum En ~ n / L n=level number En = energy of level n L = well width 17

II. General properties of chemical PAHs II.3 Vibrational properties Experimental spectra Theoretical spectra Joblin et al. 1994 http://www.astrochem.org/pahdb/ 18

II. General properties of chemical PAHs II.3 Vibrational properties PAH spectroscopy: only little variations Anion Neutral - - - - 19

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs I. From Unidentified to Aromatic Infrared bands II. General properties of chemical PAHs III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.1 Observational evidence III.2 Photodissociation of PAHs III.3 Reactivity of PAHs III.4 Formation of PAHs IV. From processes to interstellar H2 formation rate V. Summary 20

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.1 Observational evidence In HII regions and reflection nebulae: from region to region Peeters et al. 2004 & 2002 21

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.1 Observational evidence In the reflection nebulae NGC 7023: within one region Berné et al. 2007 Peeters et al. 2004 & 2002 22

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.2 Photodissociation of PAHs Direct photodissociation? apparently not efficient (Buch 1989, Jochims et al. 1994) Other possibility: statistical photodissociation 23

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.2 Photodissociation of PAHs Relaxation processes of an isolated PAH IVR: internal vibrational redistribution IC: internal conversion 24

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.2 Photodissociation of PAHs (diagram for a PAH cluster, but similar to H-loss or C-loss for an isolated PAH molecule) 25

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.2 Photodissociation of PAHs Arrhenius law kdiss(t) = Adiss exp(-e0/kt) Laplace transform Approximated microcanonical expression kdiss = dissociation rate coefficient T = vibrational temperature also kinetic temperature if enough collisions for thermalization Adiss = prefactor E0 = dissociation energy kdiss = dissociation rate coefficient E = internal (vibrational) energy Adiss = prefactor vibrational frequency entropy cost (structural changes) difficult to estimate theoretically, but not impossible E0 = dissociation energy = vibrational density of state(vdos) of the parent molecule => one has to know 26 the vibrational modes

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.2 Photodissociation of PAHs Anharmonicity = different from a parabolic potential well always the case for dissociation mode frequency vary with internal energy much more difficult to find the frequencies, and to compute VDOS from frequencies VDOS directly accessible from molecular dynamics simulations In practice, astronomers still use the harmonic VDOS 27

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.2 Photodissociation of PAHs General trends Ekern et al. 1998 Experimental results: More compact => more photostable Bigger => more photostable Loss E0 [ev] Adiss [s-1] H(even) 4.5-4.8 6.8e17 H(odd) 3.2 6.8e17 C 7.4 6.2e15 C2 8.5 3.5e17 C3 8.0 1.5e18 (Joblin et al. 2013, Léger et al. 1989) 28

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.3 Reactivity of PAHs Reactivity with hydrogen Montillaud et al. 2013 No data on neutral Only qualitative data on super-hydrogenated (more H-atoms than in normal PAHs) Measurement/calculation for dehydrogenated only for small PAHs Fast reactions with H No or slow reactions with H2 29

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.3 Reactivity of PAHs Reactivity with other atoms Le Page et al. (1999) Fast reactions for normal and dehydrogenated cations with O and N => it is likely that a more general population than strict PAHs populate the ISM Tentative family identification, using NASA Ames database, but not convincing (so far...) 30

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.3 Reactivity of PAHs Physisorption of bigger atoms (Si, Fe,...) Joalland et al. (2009) Thermodynamically favorable Weak spectral signature => not impossible but difficult E0 = 1.5 ev => easily photodissociated 31

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.3 Reactivity of PAHs Aggregation of PAHs (C24H12)11 (C96H24)4 32

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.3 Reactivity of PAHs Aggregation of PAHs Formation of PAH clusters: dilution of the excess energy within the numerous vibrational degrees of freedom (see movie, credit: Mathias Rapacioli, IRSAMC, Toulouse, France) Destruction of PAH clusters: analogous to PAH photodissociation difficulty to deal with all the degrees of freedom => rigid molecules approximation? Spectroscopy of PAH clusters: are they responsible for continuum emission in the mid-ir? 33

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.4 Formation of PAHs Asymptotic Giant Branch Stars (AGB) Cherchneff et al. 1992 IRC 10216 Shocks local dense and cold points condensation of some dust grains acceleration of grains by radiation pressure wind acceleration by dragging coupling stellar wind dynamics dust formation 34 Model of AGB circumstellar material

III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs III.4 Formation of PAHs Most classical model: the HACA mechanism in circumstellar regions of AGB stars (H-abstraction, C-addition) Frenklach et al. 1984 Consistent with observations? CRL 2688 IRC 10216 IC 418 AGB stars No UV Planetary nebula Intense UV RF Protoplanetary nebula: some UV 35

IV. From processes to interstellar H2 formation rate I. From Unidentified to Aromatic Infrared Bands II. General properties of chemical PAHs III. Evolution of interstellar PAHs IV. Influence of PAHs on ISM evolution IV.1 Photoelectric heating IV.2 Extinction curve IV.3 Formation of H2 V. Summary 36

IV. Influence of PAHs on the ISM evolution IV.1 Photoelectric heating PDR model for NGC 7023 37

IV. Influence of PAHs on the ISM evolution IV.2 Extinction curve 38

IV. Influence of PAHs on the ISM evolution IV.3 Formation of H2 Rauls & Hornekaer 2008 39

V. Summary Astronomical PAHs are defined as the carriers of the AIBs Chemical PAHs are one good model for astronomical PAHs no individual spectroscopic identification but identification of 3 large aromatic molecules: C6H6, C60, C70 Many theoretical and experimental studies provide molecular data, but still not enough Theoretical spectral database of PAHs (Cagliari, Italy) NASA Ames PAH IR Spectroscopic Database Understanding is limited by: - confusion in mid-ir spectroscopy - scarcity in UV-visible spectroscopy - the huge number of parameters (e.g. molecule size, structure, charge,...) - the absence of emission in UV-poor environments - the large size of interstellar PAHs => difficult (if not impossible) for both theoretical and experimental studies Deep coupling between PAH and ISM evolutions through photoelectric heating, extinction curve and H2 formation In the future, progresses should be achieved from on-going laboratory and theoretical studies for large species + spectroscopic observations (DIBs, AIBs, far-ir rotation lines) + coupling40 with chemistry of other species (H2 formation/excitation, small hydrocarbons, evaporating VSGs)

VI. Some bibliographic references PAH review: - Tielens, A. G. G. M., The Physics and Chemistry of the Interstellar Medium, Cambridge University Press (2005) - Tielens, A. G. G. M., ARA&A, (2008) Chemical evolution: - Le Page et al., ApJSS, 132: 233-251, (2001) - Le Page et al., ApJ, 584: 316-330 (2003) - Theoretical chemistry aspects (mainly for astronomers) - Malloci et al., A&A, 462: 627-635, (2007) - Léger et al. A&A, 213: 351-359 (1989) - Experimental chemistry aspects - Modelling aspects 41