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ISM & Astrochemistry Lecture 5. Dark Clouds. Steady state reached after about 1 million years Most hydrocarbons peak at about 10 5 yr Problem: Gas-grain interaction Sticking time ~ 3 10 9 /n(cm -3 ) yr Results in icy mantles; no gas-phase except H, D and He.
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Dark Clouds Steady state reached after about 1 million years Most hydrocarbons peak at about 105 yr Problem: Gas-grain interaction Sticking time ~ 3 109/n(cm-3) yr Results in icy mantles; no gas-phase except H, D and He.
Results from a pseudo-time dependent model with T=10K, n(H2)=106 cm-3 Fractional abundances varying over time Molecular D/H ratios • At late times the abundance of H2D+ is similar to HD2+ : this prediction was confirmed by Vastel et al. (2004) • H2D+ ~ HD2+ ~ H3+, as seen by Caselli et al. (2003) towards the prestellar core L1544. • D3+ becomes the most abundant deuterated molecule. • The atomic D/H ratio rises to ~0.8: important for surface chemistry
Star-Forming Hot Cores Density: 106 - 108 cm-3 Temperature: 100-300 K Masses ~ 103-104 solar masses Very small UV field Small saturated molecules: NH3,H2O, H2S, CH4 Large saturated molecules: CH3OH, C2H5OH, CH3OCH3 Large deuterium fractionation
Complex Molecule Formation • Ice Chemistry at 10K • store material for 1M yr • Ices absorb high energy particles (photons, cosmic rays) • hydrogen addition more efficient • star formation leads to heating and evaporation of ices • complex molecules end up in the gas phase, detectable by radio telescopes
IRAS 16293-2422 N2D+ 3-2 D2CO 5-4 13CS 5-4 OCS 9-8
Complex molecules around low mass protostars (hot corinos) Recent observations at the JCMT and IRAM show evidence of complex molecules in a low-mass protostar for the first time Detected species include methanol, acetaldehyde, methyl formate, ethyl cyanide, as well as evidence for large abundances of D-bearing molecules such as D2CO
Chemical modelling of IRAS 16293 • Depth dependence of temperature and density • Deuterium fractionation • Accretion – ion-grain recombination • Limited grain surface chemistry – CO → H2CO → CH3OH • Follow frozen molecule and grain-produced molecules • Desorption by cosmic rays and by thermal heating • Follow gas and mantle compositions
Chemical modelling of IRAS 16293 Pre-stellar core at 105 yr: Mantles contain a layered history of the cloud composition. Water and methane dominate the inner layers of the mantle, formed by the hydrogenation of O and C. CO and CH3OH and H2CO, both formed by the hydrogenation of CO, dominate the outer layers. T = 10K
Chemical modelling of IRAS 16293 Pre-stellar core at 105 yrs: Because the outer layers form from highly-depleted gas, molecular D/H ratios can be large e.g. HDCO/H2CO ~ 0.1 D2CO/H2CO ~ 0.005 Not sufficient to explain the observations.
Chemical modelling of IRAS 16293 Assume that gas is heated over time by central protostar (Viti & Williams) Gas undergoes a ‘desorption wave’ as grains warm to observed temperature Grains undergo differential desorption as most weakly bound material desorbs first
Chemical modelling of IRAS 16293 Following warming of grains evaporate mantle materials can form other complex species Time-scales are dependent on the arrival of the ‘desorption wave’ Column densities are strong functions of time .. and therefore of the physical model adopted
Summary • Information on rate coefficients is better than ever • Pure gas-phase chemistry is well understood • Not withstanding this, gas-phase chemistry has difficulties • Gas-grain interaction is critical to understanding molecules in star-forming regions • Sensitive to many uncertain physical parameters – grain composition, size and morphology; binding energies, mobilities, surface chemistry, cloud density, temperature, structure • But, increasingly sensitive observations of both gas and grain species at increasing resolution