Our galaxy contains numerous molecular clouds, regions many light-years in extent in which the density is high

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Our galaxy contains numerous molecular clouds, regions many light-years in extent in which the density is high enough and the temperature low enough for atoms to form into molecules. Most of the molecules are H2, but a small fraction of the molecules are carbon monoxide (CO). Such a molecular cloud in the constellation Orion is shown in Fig. 42.39. The left-hand image was made with an ordinary visible-light telescope; the right-hand image shows the molecular cloud in Orion as imaged with a radio telescope tuned to a wavelength emitted by CO in a rotational transition. The different colors in the radio image indicate regions of the cloud that are moving either toward us (blue) or away from us (red) relative to the motion of the cloud as a whole, as determined by the Doppler shift of the radiation. (Since a molecular cloud has about 10,000 hydrogen molecules for each CO molecule, it might seem more reasonable to tune a radio telescope to emissions from II, than to emissions from CO. Unfortunately, it toms out that the II, molecules in molecular clouds do not radiate in either the radio or visible portions of the e1ectromagnetic spectrum.)image

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Organic Chemistry

ISBN: 978-1118133576

11th edition

Authors: Graham Solomons, Craig Fryhle, Scott Snyder

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