ISM & Astrochemistry Lecture 5

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ISM & Astrochemistry Lecture 5

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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. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of ISM & Astrochemistry Lecture 5

Page 1: ISM & Astrochemistry Lecture 5

ISM & AstrochemistryLecture 5

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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.

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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

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Density & temperature distribution in L1544 dark cloud

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Radial fractionation in L1544

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Star-Forming Hot CoresDensity: 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

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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

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IRAS 16293-2422

OCS 9-813CS 5-4

N2D+ 3-2 D2CO 5-4

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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

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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

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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

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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.

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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

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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

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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