The chemistry of interstellar argonium and other probes of the molecular fraction in diffuse clouds
Abstract
We present a general parameter study, in which the abundance of interstellar argonium (ArH+) is predicted using a model for the physics and chemistry of diffuse interstellar gas clouds. Results have been obtained as a function of UV radiation field, cosmic-ray ionization rate, and cloud extinction. No single set of cloud parameters provides an acceptable fit to the typical ArH+, OH+ and H2O+ abundances observed in diffuse clouds within the Galactic disk. Instead, the observed abundances suggest that ArH+ resides primarily in a separate population of small clouds of total visual extinction of at most 0.02 mag per cloud, within which the column-averaged molecular fraction is in the range 10-5 - 10-2, while OH+ and H2O+ reside primarily in somewhat larger clouds with a column-averaged molecular fraction 0.2. This analysis confirms our previous suggestion that the argonium molecular ion is a unique tracer of almost purely atomic gas.
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