HI-to-H$_2$ Transitions in Dust-Free Interstellar Gas (2105.01681v3)
Abstract: We present numerical computations and analysis of atomic to molecular (HI-to-H$2$) transitions in cool ($\sim$100 K) low-metallicity dust-free (primordial) gas, in which molecule formation occurs via cosmic-ray driven negative ion chemistry, and removal is by a combination of far-UV photodissociation and cosmic-ray ionization and dissociation. For any gas temperature, the behavior depends on the ratio of the Lyman-Werner (LW) band FUV intensity to gas density, $I{\rm LW}/n$, and the ratio of the cosmic-ray ionization rate to the gas density, $\zeta/n$. We present sets of HI-to-H$2$ abundance profiles for a wide range of $\zeta/n$ and $I{\rm LW}/n$, for dust-free gas. We determine the conditions for which H$2$ absorption line self-shielding in optically thick clouds enables a transition from atomic to molecular form for ionization-driven chemistry. We also examine the effects of cosmic-ray energy losses on the atomic and molecular density profiles and transition points. For a unit Galactic interstellar FUV field intensity ($I{\rm LW}=1$) with LW flux $2.07\times 107$ photons cm${-2}$ s${-1}$, and a uniform cosmic-ray ionization rate $\zeta=10{-16}$ s${-1}$, an HI-to-H$_2$ transition occurs at a total hydrogen gas column density of $4\times 10{21}$ cm${-2}$, within $3\times 107$ yr, for a gas volume density of $n=106$ cm${-3}$ at 100 K. For these parameters, the dust-free limit obtains for a dust-to-gas ratio Z$\prime_d \lesssim 10{-5}$, which may be reached for overall metallicities $Z\prime\lesssim 0.01$ relative to Galactic solar values.