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The Odin satellite will not be the first
to detect water emission -- that goes to the Infrared Space
Observatory (ISO) which has detected various water lines in
several objects. The best early detection was in W Hya; subsequently
many other detections have been made, although Mira seems to have NO
water lines. In the case of W Hya, which was already known to be a
prime target for ODIN observations, a large number of water lines have
been observed as can be seen in the
figure
which comes from the ISO press release.
The ODIN mission will be much
superior to ISO for the study of the water and oxygen in the
interstellar medium, and even for stars it will provide profile
information for the 556.945 GHz line and possibly for other water
lines. ISO cannot provide profile information except for cases where
the expansion speed is much larger than usual for circumstellar
shells. Still it does appear that ISO has an advantage over ODIN for
detecting water in circumstellar sources, mostly due to the much
smaller beam size. For most circumstellar sources the ODIN beam
dilution will be fairly severe.
Rotational/Vibrational Lines of Water
An energy level diagram for
the first 63 rotational levels can be viewed here for
ortho-water
or for
para-water.
The Figures show the levels and their transitions in each case. The
simulations we are doing for the level populations and the line
strengths which result use three sets of these rotational levels for
different vibrational states of the molecule. The system is much more
complex than those we use for the CO, Hydrogen, or Oxygen molecules.
In the Figures the lines observable by ODIN are in red and the lines
that have been observed from the ground, which are nearly all maser
lines, are marked in blue or green. The X-axis quantity in these plots
is a pseudo quantum number which is used to differentiate different
levels of the same rotational quantum number.
For those who know the system
of quantum numbers for such molecules, the K quantity in the plots is
given by K = K+ - K- where K+ and K- are the more usual quantum
numbers used for the rotational levels, along with the J quantum
number which has its usual meaning. The K pseudo quantum number is
also denoted as tau in some papers. Note also that which quantum
number is called K+ and which is called K- differs from paper to paper
in the literature. Another common notation is to call the quantum
numbers K_A and K_C where "_" denotes a subscript. These are the K
quantum numbers for the oblate and prolate top cases of an axi-symmetric
rotator. Then K in the plot is K_A - K_C. A level is denoted by
quantum numbers J, K+, and K- [or K_A and K_C] in that order. The 22
GHz water maser line is due to the transition from the (0616) level to
the (0523) level, where the first quantum number in the () denotes the
ground vibrational level.
The energy level diagrams for
183 vibrational/rotational levels of ortho-water and para-water, in
two separate plots, can be viewed in a
postscript file which shows only the
rotational transitions. Note that the file probably requires ghostview
to be displayed; the size is 281 KBytes. (If the transitions between
vibrational levels are shown the plot becomes too messy to be useful.)
The postscript file has two pages in it, one for the ortho-
form and one for the para- form of the water molecule. This set of
levels is currently used in our level population simulations.
The main transition of
interest for the ODIN project from water is the 556.95 GHz line from
the (0110) level [v,J,K+,K- quantum numbers] to the (0101) level. This
is a transition from the first excited state to the ground state of
ortho-water. Other transitions which may be observable for ortho-water
are at 426.18 [(1854) to (1761)] and 578.05 GHz [(1743) to (1652)].
For para-water the potentially observable transitions are at 424.06
[(2414) to (2321)], 488.60 [(0624) to (0717)], 546.50 [(1524) to
(1431)], and 575.20 GHz [(2423) to (2330)] lines. Here the vibrational
levels 1 and 2 denote the higher vibrational levels shown in the
postscript plot. These are the (010) and (001) vibrational modes in
the standard notation.
With the water molecule the
additional degrees of freedom caused by having three atoms in the
molecule cause a significant increase in complexity compared to
diatomic molecules. The molecule no longer has to be linear and there
are additional rotational and vibrational degrees of freedom as a
result. However it turns out that the water molecule has 2-fold
rotational symmetry about the molecular axis of symmetry, and since
the two H atoms are fermions and are in equivalent positions this
leads to ortho- and para- forms of the molecule. Ideally the ortho to
para ratio will be 3 to 1 but this is not likely to be always true in
the non-equilibrium conditions of the interstellar medium or
circumstellar envelopes.
In addition to the normal v
and J quantum numbers for the levels there is another quantum number,
K, or equivalently two quantum numbers K+ and K- which label the
various levels. The K quantum number is related to the molecular
angular momentum projected onto the axis of the primary moment of
inertia of the molecule. For a given J there is not just one energy
level with (2J+1) degeneracy but a set of levels with different K
values from -J to +J each of which has (2J+1) degenerate levels.
Everything becomes much more complex because the level energy depends
upon K.
Then things become more
complicated yet, calculationally, because there are maser transitions
between some of the levels. In the numerical calculation of the level
populations this tends to produce two distinct solutions for the level
populations, and the simulation program oscillates between them. This
can [usually] be corrected by using a more sophisticated method for
finding the level population solution than is needed for the CO or
oxygen molecules
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