Recent experimental results about the formation of molecular hydrogen on
astrophysically relevant surfaces under conditions close to those encountered
in the interstellar medium are analyzed using rate equations. The parameters of
the rate equation model are fitted to temperature-programmed desorption curves
obtained in the laboratory. These parameters are the activation energy barriers
for atomic hydrogen diffusion and desorption, the barrier for molecular
hydrogen desorption, and the probability of spontaneous desorption of a
hydrogen molecule upon recombination. The model is a generalization of the
Polanyi-Wigner equation and provides a description of both first and second
order kinetic processes within a single model. Using the values of the
parameters that fit best the experimental results, the efficiency of hydrogen
recombination on olivine and amorphous carbon surfaces is obtained for a range
of hydrogen flux and surface temperature pertinent to a wide range of
interstellar conditions.Comment: 18 pages of text, Latex. Figs. 1,2,7 in PS format, Figs. 3-6 in GIF
format. Printing quality version of Figs. 3-6 is available at
http://dumbo.fiz.huji.ac.il/users/itayf/abs04.html To be published in Astro.
Phys. J., vol. 522/#2, Sept. 10 199
Recent experimental results on the formation of molecular hydrogen on
astrophysically relevant surfaces under conditions similar to those encountered
in the interstellar medium provided useful quantitative information about these
processes. Rate equation analysis of experiments on olivine and amorphous
carbon surfaces provided the activation energy barriers for the diffusion and
desorption processes relevant to hydrogen recombination on these surfaces.
However, the suitability of rate equations for the simulation of hydrogen
recombination on interstellar grains, where there might be very few atoms on a
grain at any given time, has been questioned. To resolve this problem, we
introduce a master equation that takes into account both the discrete nature of
the H atoms and the fluctuations in the number of atoms on a grain. The
hydrogen recombination rate on microscopic grains, as a function of grain size
and temperature, is then calculated using the master equation. The results are
compared to those obtained from the rate equations and the conditions under
which the master equation is required are identified.Comment: Latex document. 14 pages of text. Four associated figs in in PS
format on separate files that are "called-in" the LaTeX documen
We report on the first results of experiments to measure the recombination rate of hydrogen on surfaces of astrophysical interest. Our measurements give lower values for the recombination efficiency (sticking probability S x probability of recombination upon H-H encounter γ) than model-based estimates. We propose that our results can be reconciled with average estimates of the recombination rate (1/2n H n g v H ASγ) from astronomical observations, if the actual surface of an average grain is rougher, and its area bigger, than the one considered in models.
a b s t r a c tMolecular hydrogen is the most abundant molecule in the universe. It is the first one to form and survive photo-dissociation in tenuous environments. Its formation involves catalytic reactions on the surface of interstellar grains. The micro-physics of the formation process has been investigated intensively in the last 20 years, in parallel of new astrophysical observational and modeling progresses. In the perspectives of the probable revolution brought by the future satellite JWST, this article has been written to present what we think we know about the H 2 formation in a variety of interstellar environments.
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