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Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

In-orbit performance of Herschel-HIFI

Pieter Roelfsema; Frank Helmich; D. Teyssier; V. Ossenkopf; Patrick William Morris; Michael Olberg; R. Shipman; C. Risacher; M. Akyilmaz; R. Assendorp; I. M. Avruch; D. A. Beintema; N. Biver; A. C. A. Boogert; Colin Borys; J. Braine; M. Caris; E. Caux; J. Cernicharo; O. Coeur-Joly; C. Comito; G. de Lange; B. Delforge; P. Dieleman; L. Dubbeldam; Th. de Graauw; Kevin Edwards; Michel Fich; F. Flederus; C. Gal

Aims. In this paper the calibration and in-orbit performance of the Heterodyne Instrument for the Far-Infrared (HIFI) is described. Methods. The calibration of HIFI is based on a combination of ground and in-flight tests. Dedicated ground tests to determine those instrument parameters that can only be measured accurately using controlled laboratory stimuli were carried out in the instrument level test (ILT) campaign. Special in-flight tests during the commissioning phase (CoP) and performance verification (PV) allowed the determination of the remaining instrument parameters. The various instrument observing modes, as specified in astronomical observation templates (AOTs), were validated in parallel during PV by observing selected celestial sources. Results. The initial calibration and in-orbit performance of HIFI has been established. A first estimate of the calibration budget is given. The overall in-flight instrument performance agrees with the original specification. Issues remain at only a few frequencies.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2011

Water in Star-forming Regions with the Herschel Space Observatory (WISH). I. Overview of Key Program and First Results

E. F. van Dishoeck; L. E. Kristensen; Arnold O. Benz; Edwin A. Bergin; P. Caselli; J. Cernicharo; Fabrice Herpin; M. R. Hogerheijde; D. Johnstone; R. Liseau; B. Nisini; R. Shipman; M. Tafalla; F. F. S. van der Tak; F. Wyrowski; Yuri Aikawa; R. Bachiller; Alain Baudry; M. Benedettini; P. Bjerkeli; Geoffrey A. Blake; Sylvain Bontemps; J. Braine; C. Brinch; S. Bruderer; L. Chavarria; C. Codella; F. Daniel; Th. de Graauw; E. Deul

Water In Star-forming regions with Herschel (WISH) is a key program on the Herschel Space Observatory designed to probe the physical and chemical structures of young stellar objects using water and related molecules and to follow the water abundance from collapsing clouds to planet-forming disks. About 80 sources are targeted, covering a wide ranee of luminosities-from low ( 10(5) L-circle dot)-and a wide range of evolutionary stages-from cold prestellar cores to warm protostellar envelopes and outflows to disks around young stars. Both the HIFI and PACS instruments are used to observe a variety of lines of H2O, (H2O)-O-18 and chemically related species at the source position and in small maps around the protostars and selected outflow positions. In addition, high-frequency lines of CO, (CO)-C-13, and (CO)-O-18 are obtained with Herschel and are complemented by ground-based observations of dust continuum, HDO, CO and its isotopologs, and other molecules to ensure a self-consistent data set for analysis. An overview of the scientific motivation and observational strategy of the program is given, together with the modeling approach and analysis tools that have been developed. Initial science results are presented. These include a lack of water in cold gas at abundances that are lower than most predictions, strong water emission from shocks in protostellar environments, the importance of UV radiation in heating the gas along outflow walls across the full range of luminosities, and surprisingly widespread detection of the chemically related hydrides OH+ and H2O+ in outflows and foreground gas. Quantitative estimates of the energy budget indicate that H2O is generally not the dominant coolant in the warm dense gas associated with protostars. Very deep limits on the cold gaseous water reservoir in the outer regions of protoplanetary disks are obtained that have profound implications for our understanding of grain growth and mixing in disks.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Interstellar OH+, H2O+ and H3O+ along the sight-line to G10.6–0.4

M. Gerin; M. De Luca; J. H. Black; J. R. Goicoechea; E. Herbst; David A. Neufeld; E. Falgarone; B. Godard; J. C. Pearson; D. C. Lis; T. G. Phillips; T. A. Bell; Paule Sonnentrucker; F. Boulanger; J. Cernicharo; A. Coutens; E. Dartois; P. Encrenaz; Thomas F. Giesen; Paul F. Goldsmith; Harshal Gupta; C. Gry; P. Hennebelle; P. Hily-Blant; C. Joblin; M. Kazmierczak; R. Kołos; J. Krełowski; J. Martin-Pintado; Raquel Monje

We report the detection of absorption lines by the reactive ions OH + ,H 2O + and H3O + along the line of sight to the submillimeter continuum source G10.6−0.4 (W31C). We used the Herschel HIFI instrument in dual beam switch mode to observe the ground state rotational transitions of OH + at 971 GHz, H2O + at 1115 and 607 GHz, and H3O + at 984 GHz. The resultant spectra show deep absorption over a broad velocity range that originates in the interstellar matter along the line of sight to G10.6−0.4 as well as in the molecular gas directly associated with that source. The OH + spectrum reaches saturation over most velocities corresponding to the foreground gas, while the opacity of the H2O + lines remains lower than 1 in the same velocity range, and the H3O + line shows only weak absorption. For LSR velocities between 7 and 50 kms −1 we estimate total column densities of N(OH + ) ≥ 2.5 × 10 14 cm −2 , N(H2O + ) ∼6 × 10 13 cm −2 and N(H3O + ) ∼4.0 × 10 13 cm −2 . These detections confirm the role of O + and OH + in initiating the oxygen chemistry in diffuse molecular gas and strengthen our understanding of the gas phase production of water. The high ratio of the OH + by the H2O + column density implies that these species predominantly trace low-density gas with a small fraction of


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Herschel/HIFI observations of interstellar OH+ and H2O+ towards W49N: a probe of diffuse clouds with a small molecular fraction

David A. Neufeld; J. R. Goicoechea; Paule Sonnentrucker; J. H. Black; J. C. Pearson; Shanshan Yu; T. G. Phillips; D. C. Lis; M. De Luca; E. Herbst; Paul B. Rimmer; M. Gerin; T. A. Bell; F. Boulanger; J. Cernicharo; A. Coutens; E. Dartois; M. Kazmierczak; P. Encrenaz; E. Falgarone; T. R. Geballe; Thomas F. Giesen; B. Godard; Paul F. Goldsmith; C. Gry; Harshal Gupta; P. Hennebelle; P. Hily-Blant; C. Joblin; R. Kołos

We report the detection of absorption by interstellar hydroxyl cations and water cations, along the sight-line to the bright continuum source W49N. We have used Herschels HIFI instrument, in dual beam switch mode, to observe the 972 GHz N = 1-0 transition of OH+ and the 1115 GHz 1(11)-0(00) transition of ortho-H2O+. The resultant spectra show absorption by ortho-H2O+, and strong absorption by OH+, in foreground material at velocities in the range 0 to 70 km s(-1) with respect to the local standard of rest. The inferred OH+/H2O+ abundance ratio ranges from similar to 3 to similar to 15, implying that the observed OH+ arises in clouds of small molecular fraction, in the 2-8% range. This conclusion is confirmed by the distribution of OH+ and H2O+ in Doppler velocity space, which is similar to that of atomic hydrogen, as observed by means of 21 cm absorption measurements, and dissimilar from that typical of other molecular tracers. The observed OH+/H abundance ratio of a few x10(-8) suggests a cosmic ray ionization rate for atomic hydrogen of 0.6-2.4 x 10(-16) s(-1), in good agreement with estimates inferred previously for diffuse clouds in the Galactic disk from observations of interstellar H-3(+) and other species.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Herschel observations of EXtra-Ordinary Sources (HEXOS):The present and future of spectral surveys with Herschel/HIFI

Edwin A. Bergin; T. G. Phillips; C. Comito; Nathan R. Crockett; Dariusz C. Lis; P. Schilke; S. Wang; T. A. Bell; Geoffrey A. Blake; Bruce Bumble; E. Caux; S. Cabrit; C. Ceccarelli; J. Cernicharo; F. Daniel; Th. de Graauw; M.-L. Dubernet; M. Emprechtinger; P. Encrenaz; E. Falgarone; M. Gerin; Thomas F. Giesen; J. R. Goicoechea; Paul F. Goldsmith; H. Gupta; Paul Hartogh; Frank Helmich; E. Herbst; C. Joblin; Doug Johnstone

We present initial results from the Herschel GT key program: Herschel observations of EXtra-Ordinary Sources (HEXOS) and outline the promise and potential of spectral surveys with Herschel/HIFI. The HIFI instrument offers unprecedented sensitivity, as well as continuous spectral coverage across the gaps imposed by the atmosphere, opening up a largely unexplored wavelength regime to high-resolution spectroscopy. We show the spectrum of Orion KL between 480 and 560 GHz and from 1.06 to 1.115 THz. From these data, we confirm that HIFI separately measures the dust continuum and spectrally resolves emission lines in Orion KL. Based on this capability we demonstrate that the line contribution to the broad-band continuum in this molecule-rich source is ~20-40% below 1 THz and declines to a few percent at higher frequencies. We also tentatively identify multiple transitions of HD18O in the spectra. The first detection of this rare isotopologue in the interstellar medium suggests that HDO emission is optically thick in the Orion hot core with HDO/H2O ~ 0.02. We discuss the implications of this detection for the water D/H ratio in hot cores. Herschel is an ESA space observatory with science instruments provided by European-led Principal Investigator consortia and with important participation from NASA.Figure 2 (page 6) is also available in electronic form at http://www.aanda.org


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Water cooling of shocks in protostellar outflows: Herschel-PACS map of L1157

B. Nisini; M. Benedettini; C. Codella; T. Giannini; R. Liseau; David A. Neufeld; M. Tafalla; E. F. van Dishoeck; R. Bachiller; Alain Baudry; Arnold O. Benz; Edwin A. Bergin; P. Bjerkeli; Geoffrey A. Blake; Sylvain Bontemps; J. Braine; S. Bruderer; P. Caselli; J. Cernicharo; F. Daniel; P. Encrenaz; A. M. di Giorgio; C. Dominik; S. D. Doty; Michel Fich; A. Fuente; J. R. Goicoechea; Th. de Graauw; Frank Helmich; Gregory J. Herczeg

Context. The far-IR/sub-mm spectral mapping facility provided by the Herschel-PACS and HIFI instruments has made it possible to obtain, for the first time, images of H2O emission with a spatial resolution comparable to ground based mm/sub-mm observations. Aims. In the framework of the Water In Star-forming regions with Herschel (WISH) key program, maps in water lines of several outflows from young stars are being obtained, to study the water production in shocks and its role in the outflow cooling. This paper reports the first results of this program, presenting a PACS map of the o-H2O 179 mu m transition obtained toward the young outflow L1157. Methods. The 179 mu m map is compared with those of other important shock tracers, and with previous single-pointing ISO, SWAS, and Odin water observations of the same source that allow us to constrain the H2O abundance and total cooling. Results. Strong H2O peaks are localized on both shocked emission knots and the central source position. The H2O 179 mu m emission is spatially correlated with emission from H-2 rotational lines, excited in shocks leading to a significant enhancement of the water abundance. Water emission peaks along the outflow also correlate with peaks of other shock-produced molecular species, such as SiO and NH3. A strong H2O peak is also observed at the location of the proto-star, where none of the other molecules have significant emission. The absolute 179 mu m intensity and its intensity ratio to the H2O 557 GHz line previously observed with Odin/SWAS indicate that the water emission originates in warm compact clumps, spatially unresolved by PACS, having a H2O abundance of the order of 10(-4). This testifies that the clumps have been heated for a time long enough to allow the conversion of almost all the available gas-phase oxygen into water. The total H2O cooling is similar to 10(-1) L-circle dot, about 40% of the cooling due to H-2 and 23% of the total energy released in shocks along the L1157 outflow.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Detection of hydrogen fluoride absorption in diffuse molecular clouds with Herschel/HIFI: an ubiquitous tracer of molecular gas

Paule Sonnentrucker; David A. Neufeld; T. G. Phillips; M. Gerin; Dariusz C. Lis; M. De Luca; J. R. Goicoechea; J. H. Black; T. A. Bell; F. Boulanger; J. Cernicharo; A. Coutens; E. Dartois; M. Kazmierczak; P. Encrenaz; E. Falgarone; T. R. Geballe; Thomas F. Giesen; B. Godard; Paul F. Goldsmith; C. Gry; Harshal Gupta; P. Hennebelle; Eric Herbst; P. Hily-Blant; C. Joblin; R. Kołos; J. Krełowski; J. Martin-Pintado; K. M. Menten

We discuss the detection of absorption by interstellar hydrogen fluoride (HF) along the sight line to the submillimeter continuum sources W49N and W51. We have used Herschels HIFI instrument in dual beam switch mode to observe the 1232.4762 GHz J = 1-0 HF transition in the upper sideband of the band 5a receiver. We detected foreground absorption by HF toward both sources over a wide range of velocities. Optically thin absorption components were detected on both sight lines, allowing us to measure - as opposed to obtain a lower limit on - the column density of HF for the first time. As in previous observations of HF toward the source G10.6-0.4, the derived HF column density is typically comparable to that of water vapor, even though the elemental abundance of oxygen is greater than that of fluorine by four orders of magnitude. We used the rather uncertain N(CH) - N(H-2) relationship derived previously toward diffuse molecular clouds to infer the molecular hydrogen column density in the clouds exhibiting HF absorption. Within the uncertainties, we find that the abundance of HF with respect to H-2 is consistent with the theoretical prediction that HF is the main reservoir of gas-phase fluorine for these clouds. Thus, hydrogen fluoride has the potential to become an excellent tracer of molecular hydrogen, and provides a sensitive probe of clouds of small H-2 column density. Indeed, the observations of hydrogen fluoride reported here reveal the presence of a low column density diffuse molecular cloud along the W51 sight line, at an LSR velocity of similar to 24 km s(-1), that had not been identified in molecular absorption line studies prior to the launch of Herschel.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Herschel spectral surveys of star-forming regions - Overview of the 555–636 GHz range

C. Ceccarelli; A. Bacmann; A. C. A. Boogert; E. Caux; C. Dominik; B. Lefloch; Dariusz C. Lis; P. Schilke; F. F. S. van der Tak; P. Caselli; J. Cernicharo; C. Codella; C. Comito; A. Fuente; Alain Baudry; T. A. Bell; M. Benedettini; Edwin A. Bergin; Geoffrey A. Blake; Sandrine Bottinelli; S. Cabrit; A. Castets; A. Coutens; N. Crimier; K. Demyk; P. Encrenaz; E. Falgarone; M. Gerin; Paul F. Goldsmith; Frank Helmich

High resolution line spectra of star-forming regions are mines of information: they provide unique clues to reconstruct the chemical, dynamical, and physical structure of the observed source. We present the first results from the Herschel key project “Chemical HErschel Surveys of Star forming regions”, CHESS. We report and discuss observations towards five CHESS targets, one outflow shock spot and four protostars with luminosities bewteen 20 and 2 × 105 L_ȯ: L1157-B1, IRAS 16293-2422, OMC2-FIR4, AFGL 2591, and NGC 6334I. The observations were obtained with the heterodyne spectrometer HIFI on board Herschel, with a spectral resolution of 1 MHz. They cover the frequency range 555-636 GHz, a range largely unexplored before the launch of the Herschel satellite. A comparison of the five spectra highlights spectacular differences in the five sources, for example in the density of methanol lines, or the presence/absence of lines from S-bearing molecules or deuterated species. We discuss how these differences can be attributed to the different star-forming mass or evolutionary status. Herschel is an ESA space observatory with science instruments provided by European-led principal Investigator consortia and with important participation from NASA.Figures [see full textsee full text]-[see full textsee full text] and Tables 3, 4 (pages 6 to 8) are only available in electronic form at http://www.aanda.org


Applied Physics Letters | 1999

A traveling-wave THz photomixer based on angle-tuned phase matching

Shuji Matsuura; Geoffrey A. Blake; Rolf A. Wyss; J. C. Pearson; Christopher Kadow; Andrew W. Jackson; A. C. Gossard

A traveling-wave THz photomixer based on a free-space optical-THz phase-matching scheme is proposed. A dc-biased coplanar strip line fabricated on low-temperature-grown GaAs serves as the active area of the device, and is illuminated by two noncollinear laser beams which generate interference fringes that are accompanied by THz waves. The device with the laser-power-handling capability over 300 mW and a 3-dB bandwidth of 1.8 THz was experimentally demonstrated. The results show that traveling-wave photomixers have the potential to surpass small-area designs.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

Interstellar CH absorption in the diffuse interstellar medium along the sight-lines to G10.6-0.4 (W31C), W49N, and W51

M. Gerin; M. De Luca; J. R. Goicoechea; E. Herbst; E. Falgarone; B. Godard; T. A. Bell; A. Coutens; M. Kaźmierczak; Paule Sonnentrucker; J. H. Black; David A. Neufeld; T. G. Phillips; J. C. Pearson; Paul B. Rimmer; G. Hassel; Dariusz C. Lis; C. Vastel; F. Boulanger; J. Cernicharo; E. Dartois; P. Encrenaz; Thomas F. Giesen; Paul F. Goldsmith; Harshal Gupta; C. Gry; P. Hennebelle; P. Hily-Blant; C. Joblin; R. Kołos

We report the detection of the ground state N, J = 1, 3/2 → 1, 1/2 doublet of the methylidyne radical CH at ∼532 GHz and ∼536 GHz with the Herschel/HIFI instrument along the sight-line to the massive star-forming regions G10.6–0.4 (W31C), W49N, and W51. While the molecular cores associated with these massive star-forming regions show emission lines, clouds in the diffuse interstellar medium are detected in absorption against the strong submillimeter background. The combination of hyperfine structure with emission and absorption results in complex profiles, with overlap of the different hyperfine components. The opacities of most of the CH absorption features are linearly correlated with those of CCH, CN, and HCO + in the same velocity intervals. In specific narrow velocity intervals, the opacities of CN and HCO + deviate from the mean trends, giving rise to more opaque absorption features. We propose that CCH can be used as another tracer of the molecular gas in the absence of better tracers, with [CCH]/[H2] ∼3.2 ± 1.1 × 10 −8 . The observed [CN]/[CH], [CCH]/[CH] abundance ratios suggest that the bulk of the diffuse matter along the lines of sight has gas densities nH = n(H) + 2n(H2) ranging between 100 and 1000 cm −3 .

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J. Cernicharo

Spanish National Research Council

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Geoffrey A. Blake

California Institute of Technology

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T. A. Bell

California Institute of Technology

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M. Gerin

École Normale Supérieure

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Alain Baudry

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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