Abstract
We have mapped six molecular cloud cores in the Orion A giant molecular cloud (GMC), whose kinetic temperatures range from 10 to 30 K, in CCS and N 2H+ with the Nobeyama 45 m radio telescope to study their chemical characteristics. We identified 31 intensity peaks in the CCS and N 2H+ emission in these molecular cloud cores. We found, for cores with temperatures lower than ∼ 25 K, that the column density ratio of N(N2H+)/N(CCS) is low toward starless core regions while it is high toward star-forming core regions, in cases where we detected both the CCS and N2H+ emission. This is very similar to the tendency found in dark clouds (kinetic temperature ∼ 10 K). The criterion found in the Orion A GMC is N(N2H+)/N(CCS) ∼ 2-3. In some cases, both CCS and N2H+ emission is detected toward protostars. A secondary late-stage CCS peak in the chemical evolution caused by CO depletion may be a possible explanation for this. We found that the chemical variation of CCS and N2H+ can also be used as a tracer of evolution in warm (10-25 K) GMC cores. On the other hand, some protostars do not accompany N2H+ intensity peaks but are associated with dust continuum emitting regions, suggesting that the N2H+ abundance might be decreased due to CO evaporation in warmer star-forming sites. © The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Astronomical Society of Japan.
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Tatematsu, K., Ohashi, S., Umemoto, T., Lee, J. E., Hirota, T., Yamamoto, S., … Mizuno, N. (2014). Chemical variation in molecular cloud cores in the Orion A cloud. II. Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan, 66(1). https://doi.org/10.1093/pasj/pst016
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