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The structure and emission spectrum of J shocks in molecular gas are studied over a broad range of conditions. It is found that at high densities chemistry has a profound effect on the emission spectrum: the density behind the shock is sufficiently high that some of the internal energy of the newly formed H2 molecules is transformed to the gas as heat by collisional deexcitations, producing the H2 formation plateau. In this temperature plateau, endothermal reactions and neutral-neutral chemical reactions with activation energies can proceed efficiently, producing significant quantities of warm H2, CO, OH, and H2O and enhanced columns of warm atoms and ions. The heat generated by the H2 formation is radiated in collisionally excited atomic fine-structure lines.
Hollenbach et al. (Sat,) studied this question.