The cosmic ray ionization rate in the Galactic disk, as determined from observations of molecular ions (1704.03877v1)
Abstract: We have obtained estimates for the cosmic-ray ionization rate (CRIR) in the Galactic disk, using a detailed model for the physics and chemistry of diffuse interstellar gas clouds to interpret previously-published measurements of the abundance of four molecular ions: ArH$+$, OH$+$, H$2$O$+$ and H$_3+$. For diffuse $atomic$ clouds at Galactocentric distances in the range $R_g \sim 4 - 9$ kpc, observations of ArH$+$, OH$+$, and H$_2$O$+$ imply a mean primary CRIR of $(2.2 \pm 0.3) \exp [(R_0-R_g)/4.7\,\rm{kpc}] \times 10{-16} \rm \, s{-1}$ per hydrogen atom, where $R_0=8.5$ kpc. Within diffuse $molecular$ clouds observed toward stars in the solar neighborhood, measurements of H$_3+$ and H$_2$ imply a primary CRIR of $(2.3 \pm 0.6) \times 10{-16}\,\,\rm s{-1}$ per H atom, corresponding to a total ionization rate per H$_2$ molecule of $(5.3 \pm 1.1) \times 10{-16}\,\,\rm s{-1},$ in good accord with previous estimates. These estimates are also in good agreement with a rederivation, presented here, of the CRIR implied by recent observations of carbon and hydrogen radio recombination lines along the sight-line to Cas A. Here, our best-fit estimate for the primary CRIR is $2.9 \times 10{-16}\,\,\rm s{-1}$ per H atom. Our results show marginal evidence that the CRIR in diffuse molecular clouds decreases with cloud extinction, $A{\rm V}({\rm tot})$, with a best-fit dependence $\propto A_{\rm V}({\rm tot}){-1}$ for $A_{\rm V}({\rm tot}) \ge 0.5$.
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