학술논문

PDRs4All IV. An embarrassment of riches: Aromatic infrared bands in the Orion Bar
Document Type
Working Paper
Author
Chown, RyanSidhu, AmeekPeeters, ElsTielens, Alexander G. G. M.Cami, JanBerné, OlivierHabart, EmilieAlarcón, FelipeCanin, AmélieSchroetter, IlaneTrahin, BorisVan De Putte, DriesAbergel, AlainBergin, Edwin A.Bernard-Salas, JeronimoBoersma, ChristiaanBron, EmericCuadrado, SaraDartois, EmmanuelDicken, DanielEl-Yajouri, MeriemFuente, AsunciónGoicoechea, Javier R.Gordon, Karl D.Issa, LinaJoblin, ChristineKannavou, OlgaKhan, BariaLacinbala, OzanLanguignon, DavidGal, Romane LeMaragkoudakis, AlexandrosMeshaka, RaphaelOkada, YokoOnaka, TakashiPasquini, SofiaPound, Marc W.Robberto, MassimoRöllig, MarkusSchefter, BethanySchirmer, ThiébautVicente, SílviaWolfire, Mark G.Zannese, MarionAleman, IsabelAllamandola, LouisAuchettl, RebeccaBaratta, Giuseppe AntonioBejaoui, SalmaBera, Partha P.Black, John H.Boulanger, FrancoisBouwman, JordyBrandl, BernhardBrechignac, PhilippeBrünken, SandraBuragohain, MridusmitaBurkhardt, AndrewCandian, AlessandraCazaux, StéphanieCernicharo, JoseChabot, MarinChakraborty, ShubhadipChampion, JasonColgan, Sean W. J.Cooke, Ilsa R.Coutens, AudreyCox, Nick L. J.Demyk, KarineMeyer, Jennifer DonovanFoschino, SachaGarcía-Lario, PedroGavilan, LissethGerin, MaryvonneGottlieb, Carl A.Guillard, PierreGusdorf, AntoineHartigan, PatrickHe, JinhuaHerbst, EricHornekaer, LivJäger, CorneliaJanot-Pacheco, EduardoKaufman, MichaelKemper, FranciscaKendrew, SarahKirsanova, Maria S.Klaassen, PamelaKwok, SunLabiano, ÁlvaroLai, Thomas S. -Y.Lee, Timothy J.Lefloch, BertrandPetit, Franck LeLi, AigenLinz, HendrikMackie, Cameron J.Madden, Suzanne C.Mascetti, JoëlleMcGuire, Brett A.Merino, PabloMicelotta, Elisabetta R.Misselt, KarlMorse, Jon A.Mulas, GiacomoNeelamkodan, NaslimOhsawa, RyouOmont, AlainPaladini, RobertaPalumbo, Maria ElisabettaPathak, AmitPendleton, Yvonne J.Petrignani, AnnemiekePino, ThomasPuga, ElenaRangwala, NaseemRapacioli, MathiasRicca, AlessandraRoman-Duval, JuliaRoser, JosephRoueff, EvelyneRouillé, GaëlSalama, FaridSales, Dinalva A.Sandstrom, KarinSarre, PeterSciamma-O'Brien, EllaSellgren, KrisShenoy, Sachindev S.Teyssier, DavidThomas, Richard D.Togi, AdityaVerstraete, LaurentWitt, Adolf N.Wootten, AlwynZettergren, HenningZhang, YongZhang, Ziwei E.Zhen, Junfeng
Source
A&A 685, A75 (2024)
Subject
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
Language
Abstract
(Abridged) Mid-infrared observations of photodissociation regions (PDRs) are dominated by strong emission features called aromatic infrared bands (AIBs). The most prominent AIBs are found at 3.3, 6.2, 7.7, 8.6, and 11.2 $\mu$m. The most sensitive, highest-resolution infrared spectral imaging data ever taken of the prototypical PDR, the Orion Bar, have been captured by JWST. We provide an inventory of the AIBs found in the Orion Bar, along with mid-IR template spectra from five distinct regions in the Bar: the molecular PDR, the atomic PDR, and the HII region. We use JWST NIRSpec IFU and MIRI MRS observations of the Orion Bar from the JWST Early Release Science Program, PDRs4All (ID: 1288). We extract five template spectra to represent the morphology and environment of the Orion Bar PDR. The superb sensitivity and the spectral and spatial resolution of these JWST observations reveal many details of the AIB emission and enable an improved characterization of their detailed profile shapes and sub-components. While the spectra are dominated by the well-known AIBs at 3.3, 6.2, 7.7, 8.6, 11.2, and 12.7 $\mu$m, a wealth of weaker features and sub-components are present. We report trends in the widths and relative strengths of AIBs across the five template spectra. These trends yield valuable insight into the photochemical evolution of PAHs, such as the evolution responsible for the shift of 11.2 $\mu$m AIB emission from class B$_{11.2}$ in the molecular PDR to class A$_{11.2}$ in the PDR surface layers. This photochemical evolution is driven by the increased importance of FUV processing in the PDR surface layers, resulting in a "weeding out" of the weakest links of the PAH family in these layers. For now, these JWST observations are consistent with a model in which the underlying PAH family is composed of a few species: the so-called 'grandPAHs'.
Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures, to appear in A&A