On the density regime probed by HCN emission
Abstract: HCN J$\, =\,$1$\, -\,$0 emission is commonly used as a dense gas tracer, thought to mainly arise from gas with densities $\mathrm{\sim 104\ -\ 105\ cm{-3}}$. This has made it a popular tracer in star formation studies. However, there is increasing evidence from observational surveys of `resolved' molecular clouds that HCN can trace more diffuse gas. We investigate the relationship between gas density and HCN emission through post-processing of high resolution magnetohydrodynamical simulations of cloud-cloud collisions. We find that HCN emission traces gas with a mean volumetric density of $\mathrm{\sim 3 \times 103\ cm{-3}}$ and a median visual extinction of $\mathrm{\sim 5\ mag}$. We therefore predict a characteristic density that is an order of magnitude less than the "standard" characteristic density of $\mathrm{n \sim 3 \times 104\ cm{-3}}$. Indeed, we find in some cases that there is clear HCN emission from the cloud even though there is no gas denser than this standard critical density. We derive luminosity-to-mass conversion factors for the amount of gas at $A_{\rm V} > 8$ or at densities $n > 2.85 \times 10{3} : {\rm cm{-3}}$ or $n > 3 \times 10{4} : {\rm cm{-3}}$, finding values of $\alpha_{\rm HCN} = 6.79, 8.62$ and $27.98 : {\rm M_{\odot}} ({\rm K \, km \, s{-1} \, pc{2}})$, respectively. In some cases, the luminosity to mass conversion factor predicted mass in regions where in actuality there contains no mass.
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