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We present a simple analytic procedure for generating atomic-to-molecular (HI-to-H$_2$) density profiles for optically thick clouds illuminated by far-ultraviolet radiation. Our procedure is based on the analytic theory for the structure of one-dimensional HI/H$_2$ photon-dominated regions, presented by Sternberg et al. (2014). Depth-dependent HI and H$_2$ density fractions may be computed for arbitrary gas density, far-ultraviolet field intensity, and the metallicity dependent H$_2$ formation rate coefficient, and dust absorption cross section. We use our procedure to generate a set of HI-to-H$_2$ transition profiles for a wide range of conditions, from the weak- to strong-field limits, and from super-solar down to low metallicities. We show that if presented as functions of dust optical depth the HI and H$_2$ density profiles depend primarily on the Sternberg $alpha G$ parameter (dimensionless) that determines the dust optical depth associated with the total photodissociated HI column. We derive a universal analytic formula for the HI-to-H$_2$ transition points as a function of just $alpha G$. Our formula will be useful for interpreting emission-line observations of HI/H$_2$ interfaces, for estimating star-formation thresholds, and for sub-grid components in hydrodynamics simulations.
We study the effect of density fluctuations induced by turbulence on the HI/H$_2$ structure in photodissociation regions (PDRs) both analytically and numerically. We perform magnetohydrodynamic numerical simulations for both subsonic and supersonic t
The process of atomic-to-molecular (HI-to-H$_2$) gas conversion is fundamental for molecular-cloud formation and star formation. 21 cm observations of the star-forming region W43 revealed extremely high HI column densities, of 120-180 M$_{odot}$ pc$^
We apply the Sternberg et al. (2014) theoretical model to analyze HI and H2 observations in the Perseus molecular cloud. We constrain the physical properties of the HI shielding envelopes and the nature of the HI-to-H2 transitions. Our analysis (Bial
Molecular hydrogen is the most abundant molecule in the Universe. It is thought that a large portion of H2 forms by association of hydrogen atoms to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). We model the influence of PAHs on total H2 formation rates i
We study the H2 molecular content in high redshift damped Lyman-alpha systems (DLAs) as a function of the HI column density. We find a significant increase of the H2 molecular content around log N(HI) (cm^-2)~21.5-22, a regime unprobed until now in i