J. Takahashi et al., Product energy distribution of molecular hydrogen formed on icy mantles ofinterstellar dust, ASTROPHYS J, 520(2), 1999, pp. 724-731
The formation pumping mechanism of H-2 molecules formed on icy mantles of i
nterstellar dust was investigated theoretically based on a classical molecu
lar dynamics (MD) computational simulation. The slab-shaped amorphous water
ice was prepared at 10 and 70 K, as a realistic model surface for icy mant
les of dust, and the formation process of molecular hydrogen, H + H --> H-2
, was simulated on the ice surface at 10 and 70 K, where two MD procedures
were employed. Method A: H2O molecules were treated as rigid (hard ice mode
l). Method B: intramolecular vibrational modes of H2O were taken into; acco
unt (soft ice model). A numerical energy analysis was performed, and the pr
oduct energy distribution was obtained for H-2. It has become clear that H-
2 molecules formed on the amorphous wafer ice are in highly excited states
not only vibrationally, but also rotationally and translationally. The vibr
ational energy levels with large populations are, respectively, nu = 6-10 a
nd 6-10 for 10 and 70 K hard ice systems and nu = 6-9 and 5-9 for 10 and 70
K soft ice systems. The average vibrational energies correspond to nu = 8-
9 and nu = 7-8 for the hard ice and the soft ice, respectively. The evaluat
ed rotational and translational temperatures were 5500-6000 and 4000-5000 K
, respectively, for the hard ice, whereas they were 6500-8000 and 5500-6500
K, respectively, for the soft ice. The largest portion of the H-2 formatio
n energy resided in the vibrational energy of H-2 (70%-79%), and the second
and third largest portions were the rotational (10%-15%) and translational
energies (7%-12%), respectively. The energy absorbed by the ice was evalua
ted to be only about 4-5 kcal mol(-1) (3%-5% of the H-2 formation energy, 1
09.5 kcal mol(-1)). The present results suggest that the H-2 vibrational em
ission might be detectable in regions without a source of UV pumping or dyn
amical excitation.