The Molecular Cloud Life Cycle. II. Formation and Destruction of Molecular Clouds Diagnosed via H<sub>2</sub>Fluorescent Emission

Authors

Burkhart, Blakesley
Bialy, Shmuel
Seifried, Daniel
Walch, Stefanie
Hamden, Erika
Haworth, Thomas J.
Hoadley, Keri
Kong, Shuo
Johnson, Madisen
Jeffreson, Sarah

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Access Statement

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Molecular hydrogen (H2) formation and dissociation are key processes that drive the gas life cycle in galaxies. Using the SImulating the LifeCycle of Molecular Clouds zoom-in simulation suite, we explore the utility of future observations of H2 dissociation and formation for tracking the life cycle of molecular clouds. The simulations used in this work include nonequilibrium H2 formation, stellar radiation, sink particles, and turbulence. We find that at early times in the cloud evolution H2 formation rapidly outpaces dissociation and molecular clouds build their mass from the atomic reservoir in their environment. Rapid H2 formation is also associated with a higher early star formation rate. For the clouds studied here, H2 is strongly out of chemical equilibrium during the early stages of cloud formation but settles into a bursty chemical steady state about 2 Myr after the first stars form. At the latest stage of cloud evolution, dissociation outweighs formation and the clouds enter a dispersal phase. We discuss how theories of the molecular cloud life cycle and star formation efficiency may be distinguished with observational measurements of H2 fluorescence with a space-based high-resolution far-UV spectrometer, such as the proposed Hyperion and Eos NASA Explorer missions. Such missions would enable measurements of the H2 dissociation and formation rates, which we demonstrate can be connected to different phases in a molecular cloud's star-forming life, including cloud building, rapidly star forming, H2 chemical equilibrium, and cloud destruction.

Description

Citation

Source

Astrophysical Journal

Book Title

Entity type

Publication

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until