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Featured researches published by R. L. Snell.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1986

CARBON-MONOXIDE AS AN EXTRAGALACTIC MASS TRACER

Robert Laurence Dickman; R. L. Snell; F. P. Schloerb

The validity of integrated CO emission intensity as a tracer of molecular cloud mass in external galaxies is examined critically. By modeling extragalactic CO emission with an ensemble of independently emitting clouds, each of which obeys the virial theorem, it is demonstrated that, on average, there exists a linear relationship between integral CO intensity and the mass surface density of emitting cloud material lying within a radio telescopes antenna beam. Using molecular cloud parameters typical of the Milky Way, a ratio of mass surface density to integrated CO intensity is found which is within a factor of 2 of those frequently used to interpret extragalactic carbon monoxide observations. 28 references.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2000

Implications of Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite Observations for Interstellar Chemistry and Star Formation

Edwin A. Bergin; Gary J. Melnick; John R. Stauffer; M. L. N. Ashby; G. Chin; Neal R. Erickson; Paul F. Goldsmith; Martin Harwit; J. E. Howe; S. C. Kleiner; David G. Koch; David A. Neufeld; Brian M. Patten; R. Plume; R. Schieder; R. L. Snell; Volker Tolls; Zhong Wang; G. Winnewisser; Y. F. Zhang

A long-standing prediction of steady state gas-phase chemical theory is that H2O and O2 are important reservoirs of elemental oxygen and major coolants of the interstellar medium. Analysis of Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite (SWAS) observations has set sensitive upper limits on the abundance of O2 and has provided H2O abundances toward a variety of star-forming regions. Based on these results, we show that gaseous H2O and O2 are not dominant carriers of elemental oxygen in molecular clouds. Instead, the available oxygen is presumably frozen on dust grains in the form of molecular ices, with a significant portion potentially remaining in atomic form, along with CO, in the gas phase. H2O and O2 are also not significant coolants for quiescent molecular gas. In the case of H2O, a number of known chemical processes can locally elevate its abundance in regions with enhanced temperatures, such as warm regions surrounding young stars or in hot shocked gas. Thus, water can be a locally important coolant. The new information provided by SWAS, when combined with recent results from the Infrared Space Observatory, also provides several hard observational constraints for theoretical models of the chemistry in molecular clouds, and we discuss various models that satisfy these conditions.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2000

Water abundance in molecular cloud cores

R. L. Snell; J. E. Howe; M. L. N. Ashby; Edwin A. Bergin; G. Chin; Neal A. Erickson; Paul F. Goldsmith; Martin Harwit; S. C. Kleiner; David G. Koch; David A. Neufeld; Brian M. Patten; R. Plume; R. Schieder; John R. Stauffer; Volker Tolls; Zhong Wang; G. Winnewisser; Y. F. Zhang; Gary J. Melnick

We present Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite (SWAS) observations of the 110 → 101 transition of ortho-H2O at 557 GHz toward 12 molecular cloud cores. The water emission was detected in NGC 7538, ρ Oph A, NGC 2024, CRL 2591, W3, W3OH, Mon R2, and W33 and was not detected in TMC-1, L134N, and B335. We also present a small map of the H2O emission in S140. Observations of the H218O line were obtained toward S140 and NGC 7538, but no emission was detected. The abundance of ortho-H2O relative to H2 in the giant molecular cloud cores was found to vary between 6 × 10-10 and 1 × 10-8. Five of the cloud cores in our sample have previous H2O detections; however, in all cases the emission is thought to arise from hot cores with small angular extents. The H2O abundance estimated for the hot core gas is at least 100 times larger than in the gas probed by SWAS. The most stringent upper limit on the ortho-H2O abundance in dark clouds is provided in TMC-1, where the 3 σ upper limit on the ortho-H2O fractional abundance is 7 × 10-8.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1984

Bipolar outflows in dark clouds

Pf Goldsmith; R. L. Snell; M. Hemeon-Heyer; W. D. Langer

We have studied four dark clouds thought to contain bipolar molecular outflows by mapping the J = 1-0 transition of /sup 12/CO and observing the J = 1-0 transition of /sup 13/CO at selected positions. The clouds B335 and L723 each contain an outflow of gas which is distinctly bipolar, well collimated, and centered on low-luminosity far-infrared objects recently detected in these regions. Observations of L1455 suggest that there are two individual well-collimated molecular outflows, each with its own central source and whose centers are separated by 6.5. We attribute the high-velocity molecular material to the acceleration of the ambient moleular gas by stellar winds from the embedded objects. Observations toward L1529 do not reveal the presence of any high-velocity molecular gas.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1990

Molecular clouds associated with luminous far-infrared sources in the outer Galaxy

John M. Carpenter; R. L. Snell; F. P. Schloerb

The stellar content and physical properties of the molecular clouds associated with 21 bright far-IR sources in the outer Galaxy have been determined through C-12O, C-13O, 6-cm radio continuum, and IRAS observations. The molecular cloud masses range from 200 to about 10,000 solar masses. The far-IR luminosity-to-mass ratio for these clouds has a mean value of 6.8 solar luminosity/solar masses and shows no correlation with the cloud mass, a result similar to that found for more massive clouds in the inner Galaxy. The radio continuum survey of the 21 bright far-IR sources indicates that most of these regions probably have a single, massive star providing most of the ionization. The cloud masses derived from virial and LTE analyses are in agreement, supporting the assumptions commonly made in their calculations, and a tight, near-linear correlation is found between the C-12O luminosity and the cloud mass. The H2 column density and integrated C-12O intensity are also correlated on a point-by-point basis, although the scatter is larger than the C-12O luminosity-cloud mass relation. 61 refs.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2005

Detection of Water in the Shocked Gas Associated with IC 443: Constraints on Shock Models

R. L. Snell; David J. Hollenbach; J. E. Howe; David A. Neufeld; Michael J. Kaufman; Gary J. Melnick; Edwin A. Bergin; Zhong Wang

We have used the Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite (SWAS) to observe the ground-state 110 → 101 transition of ortho-H2O at 557 GHz in three of the shocked molecular clumps associated with the supernova remnant IC 443. We also observed simultaneously the 487 GHz line (3,1 → 3,2) of O2, the 492 GHz line (3P1 → 3P0) of C I, and the 550 GHz line (J = 5 → 4) of 13CO. We detected the H2O, C I, and 13CO lines toward the shocked clumps B, C, and G. In addition, ground-based observations of the J = 1 → 0 transitions of CO and HCO+ were obtained. Assuming that the shocked gas has a temperature of 100 K and a density of 5 × 105 cm-3, we derive SWAS beam-averaged ortho-H2O column densities of 3.2 × 1013, 1.8 × 1013, and 3.9 × 1013 cm-2 in clumps B, C, and G, respectively. Combining the SWAS results with our ground-based observations, we derive a relative abundance of ortho-H2O to CO in the postshock gas of between 2 × 10-4 and 3 × 10-3. On the basis of our results for H2O, published results of numerous atomic and molecular shock tracers, and archival Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) observations, we conclude that no single shock type can explain these observations. However, a combination of fast J-type shocks (~100 km s-1) and slow C-type shocks (~12 km s-1) or, more likely, slow J-type shocks (~12-25 km s-1) can most naturally explain the postshock velocities and the emission seen in various atomic and molecular tracers. Such a superposition of shocks might be expected as the supernova remnant overtakes a clumpy interstellar medium. The fast J-type shocks provide a strong source of ultraviolet radiation, which photodissociates the H2O in the cooling (T ≤ 300 K) gas behind the slow shocks and strongly affects the slow C-type shock structure by enhancing the fractional ionization. At these high ionization fractions, C-type shocks break down at speeds ~10-12 km s-1, while faster flows will produce J-type shocks. Our model favors a preshock gas-phase abundance of oxygen not in CO that is depleted by a least a factor of 2, presumably as water ice on grain surfaces. Both freezeout of H2O and photodissociation of H2O in the postshock gas must be significant to explain the weak H2O emission seen by SWAS and ISO from the shocked and postshock gas.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2000

Observations of Water Vapor toward Orion BN/KL

Gary J. Melnick; M. L. N. Ashby; R. Plume; Edwin A. Bergin; David A. Neufeld; G. Chin; Neal R. Erickson; Paul F. Goldsmith; Martin Harwit; J. E. Howe; S. C. Kleiner; David G. Koch; Brian M. Patten; R. Schieder; R. L. Snell; John R. Stauffer; Volker Tolls; Zhong Wang; G. Winnewisser; Y. F. Zhang

We have obtained spectra of the rotational ground-state 110-101 556.936 GHz ortho-H216O and 110-101 547.676 GHz ortho-H218O transitions toward Orion BN/KL using the Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite (SWAS). The ortho-H216O spectrum shows strong evidence for both a broad (Δv 48 km s-1) and a narrow (Δv 7.5 km s-1) component, while the ortho-H218O shows evidence for only a broad (Δv 24 km s-1) component. The broad component emission in both ortho-H216O and ortho-H218O arises primarily from gas heated within the low- and high-velocity outflows and shocked gas surrounding IRc2 in which the ortho-H216O and ortho-H218O fractional abundances are estimated to be 3.5 × 10-4 and 7 × 10-7, respectively. This finding provides further confirmation that water is efficiently and abundantly produced within warm shock-heated gas. We estimate that the hot core plus the compact ridge contribute 10% to the ortho-H216O integrated intensity within the SWAS beam. The narrow component seen in the ortho-H216O spectrum is best fitted by ortho-water emission from the extended ridge (ER) and the higher temperature core of the extended ridge (CER) with a common fractional abundance of 3.3 × 10-8. The absence of any discernible narrow component in the ortho-H218O spectrum is used to set 3 σ upper limits on the ortho-water fractional abundance within the ER of 7 × 10-8 and within the CER of 5.2 × 10-7. This implies that within the dense extended quiescent region, gas-phase water is neither a major repository of oxygen nor a major coolant in Orion BN/KL.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2000

Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite Observations of Jupiter and Saturn:Detection of 557 GHz Water Emission from the Upper Atmosphere

Edwin A. Bergin; E. Lellouch; Martin Harwit; M. A. Gurwell; Gary J. Melnick; M. L. N. Ashby; G. Chin; N. R. Erickson; Paul F. Goldsmith; J. E. Howe; S. C. Kleiner; David G. Koch; David A. Neufeld; Brian M. Patten; R. Plume; R. Schieder; R. L. Snell; John R. Stauffer; Volker Tolls; Zhong Wang; G. Winnewisser; Y. F. Zhang

We have used the Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite to carry out observations on Jupiter and Saturn in two bands centered at 489 and 553 GHz. We detect spectrally resolved 557 GHz H2O emission on both planets, constraining for the first time the residence levels of external water vapor in Jupiters and Saturns stratosphere. For both planets, the line appears to be formed at maximum pressures of about 5 mbar. For Jupiter, the data further show that water is not uniformly mixed but increases with altitude above the condensation level. In each planet, the amount of water implied by the data is 1.5-2.5 times larger than inferred from Infrared Space Observatory data. In addition, our observations provide new whole-disk brightness measurements of Jupiter and Saturn near 489 and 553 GHz.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2000

Observations of Absorption by Water Vapor toward Sagittarius B2

David A. Neufeld; M. L. N. Ashby; Edwin A. Bergin; G. Chin; Neal R. Erickson; Paul F. Goldsmith; Martin Harwit; J. E. Howe; S. C. Kleiner; David G. Koch; Brian M. Patten; R. Plume; R. Schieder; R. L. Snell; John R. Stauffer; Volker Tolls; Zhong Wang; G. Winnewisser; Y. F. Zhang; Gary J. Melnick

We have observed the 110-101 pure rotational transitions of both H216O and H218O toward Sagittarius B2 using the Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite. The spectra thereby obtained show a complex pattern of absorption and—in the case of H216O—emission, with numerous features covering a wide range of LSR velocities (-130 to 130 km s-1) and representing absorption both in gas associated with Sgr B2 as well as by several components of foreground gas along the line of sight. The ortho-water abundance derived for the absorbing foreground gas is ~6 × 10-7 relative to H2.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2000

Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite observations of water vapor toward comet C/1999 H1 (Lee)

David A. Neufeld; John R. Stauffer; Edwin A. Bergin; S. C. Kleiner; Brian M. Patten; Zhong Wang; M. L. N. Ashby; G. Chin; Neal R. Erickson; Paul F. Goldsmith; Martin Harwit; J. E. Howe; David G. Koch; R. Plume; R. Schieder; R. L. Snell; Volker Tolls; G. Winnewisser; Y. F. Zhang; Gary J. Melnick

We have detected the 110-101 pure rotational transition of water vapor toward comet C/1999 H1 using the Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite. Over the period 1999 May 19.01-23.69 UT, the average integrated antenna temperature was 1.79 ± 0.03 K km s-1 within a 33 × 45 (FWHM) elliptical beam. For an assumed ortho-to-para ratio of 3, we estimate the total water production rate as 8 × 1028 s-1. This value lies approximately 50% above the value estimated by Biver et al. from contemporaneous radio observations of hydroxyl molecules. The observed line width of 1.8 km s-1 (FWHM) is broader than the instrumental profile and suggests an intrinsic line width of about 1.4 km s-1 (FWHM). The data, taken during a portion of every 97 minute spacecraft orbit over a 4.68 day period, provide no evidence for variability.

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