Abstract
(Abridged) Massive stars can determine the evolution of molecular clouds with
their strong ultraviolet (UV) radiation fields. Moreover, UV radiation is
relevant in setting the thermal gas pressure in star-forming clouds, whose
influence can extend from the rims of molecular clouds to entire star-forming
galaxies. Probing the fundamental structure of nearby molecular clouds is
therefore crucial to understand how massive stars shape their surrounding
medium and how fast molecular clouds are destroyed, specifically at their
UV-illuminated edges, where models predict an intermediate zone of neutral
atomic gas between the molecular cloud and the surrounding ionized gas whose
size is directly related to the exposed physical conditions. We present the
highest angular resolution (~$0.5$", corresponding to $207$ au) and
velocity-resolved images of the molecular gas emission in the Horsehead nebula,
using CO J=3-2 and HCO$^+$ J=4-3 observations with ALMA. We find that CO and
HCO$^+$ are present at the edge of the cloud, very close to the ionization
(H$^+$/H) and dissociation fronts (H/H$_2$), suggesting a very thin layer of
neutral atomic gas (<$650$ au) and a small amount of CO-dark gas
($A_V=0.006-0.26$ mag) for stellar UV illumination conditions typical of
molecular clouds in the Milky Way. The new ALMA observations reveal a web of
molecular gas filaments with an estimated thermal gas pressure of
$P_th = (2.3 - 4.0) 10^6$ K cm$^-3$, and the presence of a
steep density gradient at the cloud edge that can be well explained by
stationary isobaric PDR models with pressures consistent with our estimations.
However, in the HII region and PDR interface, we find $P_th,PDR >
P_th,HII$, suggesting the gas is slightly compressed. Therefore,
dynamical effects cannot be completely ruled out and even higher angular
observations will be needed to unveil their role.
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