Radiative and mechanical feedback into the molecular gas in the Large Magellanic Cloud. II. 30 Doradus

Lebouteiller, V.; Madden, S. C.; Galliano, F.; Chevance, M.; Lee, M. -Y.; Le Petit, F.; Wu, R.; Gusdorf, A.; Lesaffre, P.

Germany, France, South Korea

Abstract

With an aim of probing the physical conditions and excitation mechanisms of warm molecular gas in individual star-forming regions, we performed Herschel SPIRE Fourier Transform Spectrometer (FTS) observations of 30 Doradus in the Large Magellanic Cloud. In our FTS observations, important far-infrared (FIR) cooling lines in the interstellar medium, including CO J = 4-3 to J = 13-12, [C I] 370 μm, and [N II] 205 μm, were clearly detected. In combination with ground-based CO J = 1-0 and J = 3-2 data, we then constructed CO spectral line energy distributions (SLEDs) on 10 pc scales over a 60 pc × 60 pc area and found that the shape of the observed CO SLEDs considerably changes across 30 Doradus. For example, the peak transition Jp varies from J = 6-5 to J = 10-9, while the slope characterized by the high-to-intermediate J ratio α ranges from 0.4 to 1.8. To examine the source(s) of these variations in CO transitions, we analyzed the CO observations, along with [C II] 158 μm, [C I] 370 μm, [O I] 145 μm, H2 0-0 S(3), and FIR luminosity data, using state-of-the-art models of photodissociation regions and shocks. Our detailed modeling showed that the observed CO emission likely originates from highly compressed (thermal pressure P/kB 107-109 K cm-3) clumps on 0.7-2 pc scales, which could be produced by either ultraviolet (UV) photons (UV radiation field GUV 103-105 Mathis fields) or low-velocity C-type shocks (pre-shock medium density npre 104-106 cm-3 and shock velocity vs 5-10 km s-1). Considering the stellar content in 30 Doradus, however, we tentatively excluded the stellar origin of CO excitation and concluded that low-velocity shocks driven by kiloparsec-scale processes (e.g., interaction between the Milky Way and the Magellanic Clouds) are likely the dominant source of heating for CO. The shocked CO-bright medium was then found to be warm (temperature T 100-500 K) and surrounded by a UV-regulated low-pressure component (P/kB a few (104 -105) K cm-3) that is bright in [C II] 158 μm, [C I] 370 μm, [O I] 145 μm, and FIR dust continuum emission.

Herschel is an ESA space observatory with science instruments provided by European-led Principal Investigator consortia and with important participation from NASA.

2019 Astronomy and Astrophysics
Herschel 24