Census of High- and Medium-mass Protostars V. CO Abundance and the Galactic XCO Factor

Abstract

We present the second dust continuum data release in the Census of High- and Medium-mass Protostars (CHaMP), expanding the methodology trialed in Pitts et al. 2019 to the entire CHaMP survey area (280<l<300, -4<b<+2). This release includes maps of dust temperature (Td), H2 column density (NH2), gas-phase CO abundance, and temperature-density plots for every prestellar clump with Herschel coverage, showing no evidence of internal heating for most clumps in our sample. We show that CO abundance is a strong function of Td, and can be fit with a second-order polynomial in log-space, with a typical dispersion of a factor of 2--3. The CO abundance peaks at 20.0+0.4-1.0 K with a value of 7.4+0.2-0.3×10-5 per H2; the low Td at which this maximal abundance occurs relative to laboratory results is likely due to interstellar UV bombardment in the largest survey fields. Finally, we show that, as predicted by theoretical literature and hinted at in previous studies of individual clouds, the conversion factor from integrated 12CO line intensity (I12CO) to NH2, the XCO-factor, varies as a broken power-law in I12CO with a transition zone between 70 and 90 K km-1. The XCO-function we propose has NH2 I12CO0.51 for I12CO70 K km-1 and NH2 I12CO2.3 for I12CO90 K km-1. The high-I12CO side should be generalizable with known adjustments for metallicity, but the influence of interstellar UV fields on the low-I12CO side may be sample specific. We discuss how these results expand upon previous works in the CHaMP series, and help tie together observational, theoretical, and laboratory studies on CO over the past decade.

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