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Starburst Energy Feedback Seen Through HCO$^+$/HOC$^+$ Emission in NGC 253 from ALCHEMI

Published 14 Sep 2021 in astro-ph.GA | (2109.06476v1)

Abstract: Molecular abundances are sensitive to UV-photon flux and cosmic-ray ionization rate. In starburst environments, the effects of high-energy photons and particles are expected to be stronger. We examine these astrochemical signatures through multiple transitions of HCO$+$ and its metastable isomer HOC$+$ in the center of the starburst galaxy NGC 253 using data from the ALMA large program ALCHEMI. The distribution of the HOC$+$(1-0) integrated intensity shows its association with "superbubbles", cavities created either by supernovae or expanding HII regions. The observed HCO$+$/HOC$+$ abundance ratios are $\sim 10-150$, and the fractional abundance of HOC$+$ relative to H$_2$ is $\sim 1.5\times 10{-11} - 6\times 10{-10}$, which implies that the HOC$+$ abundance in the center of NGC 253 is significantly higher than in quiescent spiral-arm dark clouds in the Galaxy and the Galactic center clouds. Comparison with chemical models implies either an interstellar radiation field of $G_0\gtrsim 103$ if the maximum visual extinction is $\gtrsim 5$, or a cosmic-ray ionization rate of $\zeta \gtrsim 10{-14}$ s${-1}$ (3-4 orders of magnitude higher than that within clouds in the Galactic spiral-arms) to reproduce the observed results. From the difference in formation routes of HOC$+$, we propose that a low-excitation line of HOC$+$ traces cosmic-ray dominated regions, while high-excitation lines trace photodissociation regions. Our results suggest that the interstellar medium in the center of NGC 253 is significantly affected by energy input from UV-photons and cosmic rays, sources of energy feedback.

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