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C$^+$ is a critical constituent of many regions of the interstellar medium, as it can be a major reservoir of carbon and, under a wide range of conditions, the dominant gas coolant. Emission from its 158$mu$m fine structure line is used to trace the structure of photon dominated regions in the Milky Way and is often employed as a measure of the star formation rate in external galaxies. Under most conditions, the emission from the single [CII] line is proportional to the collisional excitation rate coefficient. We here used improved calculations of the deexcitation rate of [CII] by collisions with H$_2$ to calculate more accurate expressions for interstellar C$^+$ fine structure emission, its critical density, and its cooling rate. The collision rates in the new quantum calculation are $sim$ 25% larger than those previously available, and narrow the difference between rates for excitation by atomic and molecular hydrogen. This results in [CII] excitation being quasi-independent of the molecular fraction and thus dependent only on the total hydrogen particle density. A convenient expression for the cooling rate at temperatures between 20 K and 400 K, assuming an LTE H$_2$ ortho to para ration is $Lambda ({rm LTE~OPR}) = left(11.5 + 4.0,e^{-100,mathrm K/T^{rm kin}}right);e^{-91.25,mathrm K/T^{rm kin}},n ({rm C}^{+}),n({rm H}_2)times 10^{-24};{rm ergs}~{rm cm}^{-3}~{rm s}^{-1}$. The present work should allow more accurate and convenient analysis of the [CII] line emission and its cooling.
We compute the rotational quenching rates of the first 81 rotational levels of ortho- and para-H2CO in collision with ortho- and para-H2, for a temperature range of 10-300 K. We make use of the quantum close-coupling and coupled-states scattering met hods combined with the high accuracy potential energy surface of Troscompt et al. (2009a). Rates are significantly different from the scaled rates of H2CO in collision with He; consequently, critical densities are noticeably lower. We compare a full close- coupling computation of pressure broadening cross sections with experimental data and show that our results are compatible with the low temperature measurements of Mengel & De Lucia (2000), for a spin temperature of H2 around 50 K.
Collisional de-excitation rates of partially deuterated molecules are different from the fully hydrogenated species because of lowering of symmetry. We compute the collisional (de)excitation rates of ND2H by ground state para-H2, extending the previo us results for He- lium. We describe the changes in the potential energy surface of NH3- H2 involved by the pres- ence of two deuterium nuclei. Cross sections are calculated within the full close-coupling ap- proach and augmented with coupled-state calculations. Collisional rate coefficients are given between 5 and 35 K, a range of temperatures which is relevant to cold interstellar conditions. We find that the collisional rates of ND2H by H2 are about one order of magnitude higher than those obtained with Helium as perturber. These results are essential to radiative transfer modelling and will allow to interpret the millimeter and submillimeter detections of ND2H with better constraints than previously.
Theoretical cross sections for the pressure broadening by hydrogen of rotational transitions of water are compared to the latest available measurements in the temperature range 65-220 K. A high accuracy interaction potential is employed in a full clo se coupling calculation. A good agreement with experiment is observed above ~80 K while the sharp drop observed experimentally at lower temperatures is not predicted by our calculations. Possible explanations for this discrepancy include the failure of the impact approximation and the possible role of ortho-to-para conversion of H2.
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