Scientific quality of the proposal
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Research methodology : Astronomical models
The physico-chemical models will
be coupled to excitation calculations and radiative transfer codes to
predict molecular line intensities to be compared with observations.
Collisional excitation rates required to compute the line emission
come from quantum chemical calculations. The line radiative transfer
codes available within the consortium (UPS, U.J.F.,
RuG, Meudon, Madrid, UMIST, Leiden)
are very complementary and treat simultaneously the statistical
equilibrium between the level populations and the line transfer in
the co-moving frame using accelerated lambda iteration numerical
schemes. The models will directly incorporate the new chemical and
collisional studies that will be performed within the consortium.
Models for photo-dissociation regions (UPS, Leiden,
RuG, Meudon) will be applied to surfaces of
proto-planetary disks and the inner surfaces of proto-stellar
condensations once the protostar turns on. These models will be
extended to take into account the propagation of the molecular
dissociation front into the surroundings. Models for C-type shocks
and for ambipolar diffusion in star forming regions will be extended
to include the rates—newly measured in the laboratory or
quantum chemically calculated by the consortium—for computation
of the ionisation state of interstellar species (molecules, PAHs,
carbon clusters and grains) in these environments (Meudon,
Durham). Existing chemical models of star forming dark clouds
will be updated to focus on chemical evolution driven by ambipolar
diffusion and free-fall collapse (UMIST).