Polarization observations reveal scale-dependent differences in magnetic field morphology between molecular clouds and clumps, a velocity-dispersion correlation, and unreliable field-strength estimates that contradict flux conservation.
The Critical Density and the Effective Excitation Density of Commonly Observed Molecular Dense Gas Tracers
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
The optically thin critical densities and the effective excitation densities to produce a 1 K km/s (or 0.818 Jy km/s $(\frac{\nu_{jk}}{100 \rm{GHz}})^2 \, (\frac{\theta_{beam}}{10^{\prime\prime}})^2$) spectral line are tabulated for 12 commonly observed dense gas molecular tracers. The dependence of the critical density and effective excitation density on physical assumptions (i.e. gas kinetic temperature and molecular column density) is analyzed. Critical densities for commonly observed dense gas transitions in molecular clouds (i.e. HCN $1-0$, HCO$^+$ $1-0$, N$_2$H$^+$ $1-0$) are typically $1 - 2$ orders of magnitude larger than effective excitation densities because the standard definitions of critical density do not account for radiative trapping and 1 K km/s lines are typically produced when radiative rates out of the upper energy level of the transition are faster than collisional depopulation. The use of effective excitation density has a distinct advantage over the use of critical density in characterizing the differences in density traced by species such as NH$_3$, HCO$^+$, N$_2$H$^+$, and HCN as well as their isotpologues; but, the effective excitation density has the disadvantage that it is undefined for transitions when $E_u/k \gg T_k$, for low molecular column densities, and for heavy molecules with complex spectra (i.e. CH$_3$CHO).
years
2026 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2representative citing papers
Simulations of collapsing cores find that ε_ff varies with core definition via density threshold, open vs closed boundaries, and initial density, with higher values in low-mass cores due to lower infall rates.
citing papers explorer
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Characterising magnetic fields at the onset of star cluster formation: From giant molecular clouds to infrared dark clumps
Polarization observations reveal scale-dependent differences in magnetic field morphology between molecular clouds and clumps, a velocity-dispersion correlation, and unreliable field-strength estimates that contradict flux conservation.