Diffuse Far-ultraviolet Observations of the Taurus Region

Abstract

Diffuse far-ultraviolet (FUV: 1370-1670 A) flux from the Taurus molecular cloud region has been observed with the SPEAR/FIMS imaging spectrograph. An FUV continuum map of the Taurus region, similar to the visual extinction maps, shows a distinct cloud core and halo region. The dense cloud core, where the visual extinction is Av > 1.5, obscures the background diffuse FUV radiation, while a scattered FUV radiation is seen in and beyond the halo region where Av < 1.5. The total intensity of H2 fluorescence in the cloud halo is IH2 = 6.5 x 104 photons cm-2 s-1 sr-1 in the 1370-1670 A wavelength band. A synthetic model of the H2 fluorescent emission fits the present observation best with a hydrogen density nH = 50 cm-3, H2 column density N(H2) = 0.8 x 1020 cm-2, and an incident FUV intensity IUV = 0.2. H2 fluorescence is not seen in the core presumably because the required radiation flux to induce fluorescence is unable to penetrate the core region.

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