E. Falgarone et Tg. Phillips, SMALL-SCALE DENSITY AND VELOCITY STRUCTURE OF A MOLECULAR CLOUD EDGE, The Astrophysical journal, 472(1), 1996, pp. 191-204
This paper presents a detailed analysis of a random piece of molecular
gas, chosen in a weakly CO-emitting part of a cloud edge in the Perse
us-Auriga complex. The data set consists of high angular resolution ob
servations in the (CO)-C-12 J = 1-0, J = 2-1, J = 3-2, and J = 4-3 and
CS J = 2-1 and J = 3-2 lines, combined with CO (J = 3-2) and (CO)-C-1
3 (J = 2-1) observations obtained previously. The observational result
s can be summarized as follows: (i) At many locations the CO line prof
iles exhibit weak, broad line wings, superimposed on a narrow intense
line core. (ii) The CO line emission is highly structured down to the
resolution of the observations (similar to 0.014 pc), but the spatial
distribution of the line core emission is different from that of the w
ing emission. The former is concentrated mostly in two distinct struct
ures of size similar to 0.06 pc, while the latter is concentrated in a
long filamentary structure (l similar to 0.2. pc) that crosses the ma
pped held and is barely resolved in its transverse dimension. (iii) Th
e J = 2-1 to J=1-0 CO Line ratio is approximately constant across the
entire field and has the same value, R = 0.62+/-0.08, in the GO-bright
areas as in the almost 10 times weaker areas. (iv) A weak CS (2-1) li
ne has been detected at the core velocity, and only an upper limit has
been obtained for the CS (3-2) line, and (v) the low column density g
as that emits in the line wings has been detected clearly in CO (3-2)
and detected tentatively in the CO (4-3) line. The present work streng
thens the results of our previous study, that the edges of molecular c
louds are weak CO emitters when observed at the parsec scale, say, bec
ause the CO emission there is beam-diluted emission of dense (nH(2) >
10(4) cm(-3)), cold (T-k < 15 K) structures. The moderate CO beam-aver
aged optical depth and the smoothness of the CO profiles set an upper
limit of similar to 35 AU for the size of the cells within which each
CO photon interacts with the gas. This result, though, does not necess
arily imply that the GO-free regions are structured similarly and, ind
eed, a moderate-opacity region of GO-free gas and dust is required to
surround the GO-emitting structures in order to provide shielding from
the interstellar radiation held. Our work also reveals, for the first
time, that the line wing emission also originates in small-scale stru
cture. The CO (4-3) wing measurement is critically important in that i
t constrains the wing gas temperature to be in the range from T-k simi
lar to 25 K, for dense gas at n(H2) similar to 10(3) cm(-3), up to T-k
similar to 250 K for n(H2) similar to 200 cm(-3). Its filamentary mor
phology is consistent with the idea that it is dilute and warm gas con
fined to the specific structures in which the energy of turbulence is
being dissipated, in an intermittent way. The large body of observatio
nal results presently available on the CO emission properties of non-s
tar-forming molecular clouds, from the smallest to the largest scales,
is not consistent with a picture of randomly moving dense clumps imme
rsed in a lower density medium. The AU scale dense CO cells have to be
distributed on a fractal set with correlated velocities. They are lik
ely to be dynamically connected to the turbulent velocity field of the
gas that fills the volume (atomic and molecular hydrogen) and probabl
y trace the active regions of large vorticity either because they woul
d tend to be trapped in these structures or because those may be regio
ns of enhanced CO formation rate.