GeminiFocus April 2017 | Page 13

Figure 2. Image of emisson from the 1-0 S(1) line of molecular hydrogen in a portion of the OMC-1 outflow in the H 2 1–0 S(1) line (from Bally et al., A&A, 579: A130, 2015) with the GNIRS slit superimposed. The 1.9-2.5-micron spectra (published in Geballe, Burton, & Pike, ApJ, 837: 83, 2017) at the four positions denoted by asterisks show some of the same weak, high-excitation lines previously seen in HH 7. North to traverse several regions of intense H 2 line emission in OMC-1, including one of the famous “bullets” or “fingers,” as shown in Figure 2. The results are unequivocal — the high tem- perature (5,000 K) component is present at all analyzed locations along the slit. It thus appears to be a common characteristic of shock-excited molecular gas. In OMC-1 the largest percentage of hot H 2 (still relatively small at only about 3.3%) is in the “bullet” (a dense and compact clump of gas piercing the ambient molecular cloud at about 120 km/sec). This is consistent with the hypothe- sis that the amount of dissociation increases April 2017 with shock speed, and thus it lends support to the idea that the high temperature line emission is from recently reformed H 2 . Future detailed modeling and laboratory observations of the formation spectrum are badly needed to compare with the observa- tions. Burton, Pike, and I have plans to obtain further observations of the high tempera- ture H 2 at higher sensitivity and in both more extreme and less extreme environments. Tom Geballe is an astronomer at the Gemini North Observatory. He can be reached at: [email protected]. GeminiFocus 11