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Rotational excitation of NS + by H 2 revisited: A new global potential energy surface and rate coefficients

Due to the lack of specific collisional data, the abundance of NS in cold dense interstellar clouds was determined using collisional rate coefficients of CS as a substitute. To better understand the chemistry of sulfur in the interstellar medium, further abundance modeling using the actual NS collis...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Journal of chemical physics 2022-05, Vol.156 (20), p.204311
Main Authors: Bop, C T, Kalugina, Y, Lique, F
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Due to the lack of specific collisional data, the abundance of NS in cold dense interstellar clouds was determined using collisional rate coefficients of CS as a substitute. To better understand the chemistry of sulfur in the interstellar medium, further abundance modeling using the actual NS collisional rate coefficients is needed. For this purpose, we have computed the first full 4D potential energy surface of the NS -H van der Waals complex using the explicitly correlated coupled cluster approach with single, double, and non-iterative triple excitation in conjunction with the augmented-correlation consistent-polarized valence triple zeta basis set. The potential energy surface exhibits a global minimum of 848.24 cm for a planar configuration of the complex. The long-range interaction energy, described using multipolar moments, is sensitive to the orientation of H up to radial distances of ∼50 a . From this new interaction potential, we derived excitation cross sections, induced by collision with ortho- and para-H , for the 15 low-lying rotational levels of NS using the quantum mechanical close-coupling approach. By thermally averaging these data, we determined downward rate coefficients for temperatures up to 50 K. By comparing them with the previous NS -H data, we demonstrated that reduced dimensional approaches are not suited for this system. In addition, we found that the CS collisional data underestimate our results by up to an order of magnitude. The differences clearly indicate that the abundance of NS , in cold dense clouds retrieved from observational spectra, must be reassessed using these new collisional rate coefficients.
ISSN:0021-9606
1089-7690
DOI:10.1063/5.0089745