scholarly journals Carbon-grain sublimation: a new top-down component to protostellar chemistry

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Merel van 't Hoff ◽  
Edwin Bergin ◽  
Jes Jorgensen ◽  
Geoffrey Blake

<p>One of the main goals in the fields of exoplanets and planet formation is to determine the composition of terrestrial, potentially habitable, planets and to link this to the composition of protoplanetary disks. A longstanding puzzle in this regard is the Earth's severe carbon deficit; Earth is 2-4 orders of magnitude depleted in carbon compared to interstellar grains and comets. The solution to this conundrum is that carbon must have been returned to the gas phase in the inner protosolar nebula, such that it could not get accreted onto the forming bodies. A process that could be responsible is the sublimation of carbon grains at the so-called soot line (~300 K) early in the planet-formation process. I will argue that the most likely signatures of this process are an excess of hydrocarbons and nitriles inside the soot line around protostars, and a higher excitation temperature for these molecules compared to oxygen-bearing complex organics that desorb around the water snowline (~100 K). Moreover, I will show that such characteristics have indeed been reported in the literature, for example, in Orion KL, although not uniformly, potentially due to differences in observational settings or related to the episodic nature of protostellar accretion. If this process is active, this would mean that there is an heretofore unrecognized component to the carbon chemistry during the protostellar phase that is acting from the top down - starting from the destruction of larger species - instead of from the bottom up from atoms. In the presence of such a top-down component, the origin of organic molecules needs to be re-explored. </p>

2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (S350) ◽  
pp. 420-421
Author(s):  
Marina G. Rachid ◽  
Jeroen Terwisscha van Scheltinga ◽  
Daniël Koletzki ◽  
Giulia Marcandalli ◽  
Ewine F. van Dishoeck ◽  
...  

AbstractExperimental and theoretical studies have shown that Complex Organic Molecules (COMs) can be formed on icy dusty grains in molecular clouds and protoplanetary disks. The number of astronomical detections of solid COMs, however, is very limited. With the upcoming launch of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) this should change, but in order to identify solid state features of COMs, accurate laboratory data are needed. Here we present high resolution (0.5 cm–1) infrared ice spectra of acetone (C3H6O) and methyl formate (HCOOCH3), two molecules already identified in astronomical gas phase surveys, whose interstellar synthesis is expected to follow solid state pathways.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Linda Podio ◽  
Antonio Garufi ◽  
Claudio Codella ◽  
Davide Fedele ◽  
Kazi Rygl ◽  
...  

<p>How have planets formed in the Solar System? And what chemical composition they inherited from their natal environment? Is the chemical composition passed unaltered from the earliest stages of the formation of the Sun to its disk and then to the planets which assembled in the disk? Or does it reflects chemical processes occurring in the disk and/or during the planet formation process? And what was the role of comets in the delivery of volatiles and prebiotic compounds to early Earth?</p> <p>A viable way to answer these questions is to observe protoplanetary disks around young Sun-like stars and compare their chemical composition with that of the early Solar System, which is imprinted in comets. The impacting images recently obtained by millimetre arrays of antennas such as ALMA provided the first observational evidence of ongoing planet formation in 0.1-1 million years old disks, through rings and gaps in their dust and gas distribution. The chemical composition of the forming planets and small bodies clearly depends on the location and timescale for their formation and is intimately connected to the spatial distribution and abundance of the various molecular species in the disk. The chemical characterisation of disks is therefore crucial.</p> <p>This field, however, is still in its infancy, because of the small sizes of disks (~100 au) and to the low gas-phase abundance of molecules (abundances with respect to H<sub>2</sub> down to 10<sup>-12</sup>), which requires an unprecedented combination of angular resolution and sensitivity. I will show the first pioneering results obtained as part of the ALMA chemical survey of protoplanetary disks in the Taurus star forming region (ALMA-DOT program). Thanks to the ALMA images at ~20 au resolution, we recovered the radial distribution and abundance of diatomic molecules (CO and CN), S-bearing molecules (CS, SO, SO<sub>2</sub>, H<sub>2</sub>CS), as well as simple organics (H<sub>2</sub>CO and CH<sub>3</sub>OH) which are key for the formation of prebiotic compounds. Enhanced H<sub>2</sub>CO emission in the cold outer disk, outside the CO snowline, suggests that organic molecules may be efficiently formed in disks on the icy mantles of dust grain. This could be the dawn of ice chemistry in the disk, producing ices rich of complex organic molecules (COMs) which could be incorporated by the bodies forming in the outer disk region, such as comets.<span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span></p> <p>The next step is the comparison of the molecules radial distribution and abundance in disks with the chemical composition of comets, which are the leftover building blocks of giant planet cores and other planetary bodies. The first pioneering results in this direction have been obtained thanks to the ESA’s <em>Rosetta </em>mission, which allowed obtaining in situ measurements of the COMs abundance on the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. The comparison with three protostellar solar analogs observed on Solar System scales has shown comparable COMs abundance, implying that the volatile composition of comets and planetesimals may be partially inherited from the protostellar stage. The advent of new mission, devoted to sample return such as AMBITION will allow us to do a step ahead in this direction.</p> <p> </p>


2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (A29A) ◽  
pp. 309-312
Author(s):  
Karin I. Öberg

AbstractIces form on the surfaces of interstellar and circumstellar dust grains though freeze-out of molecules and atoms from the gas-phase followed by chemical reactions. The composition, chemistry, structure and desorption properties of these ices regulate two important aspects of planet formation: the locations of major condensation fronts in protoplanetary disks (i.e. snow lines) and the formation efficiencies of complex organic molecules in astrophysical environments. The latter regulates the availability of prebiotic material on nascent planets. With ALMA it is possible to directly observe both (CO) snowlines and complex organics in protoplanetary disks. The interpretation of these observations requires a detailed understanding of the fundamental ice processes that regulate the build-up, evolution and desorption of icy grain mantles. This proceeding reviews how experiments on thermal CO and N2 ice desorption, UV photodesorption of CO ice, and CO diffusion in H2O ice have been used to guide and interpret astrochemical observations of snowlines and complex molecules.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (S350) ◽  
pp. 463-464
Author(s):  
Catherine Walsh ◽  
John D. Ilee

AbstractResolved emission from gas-phase methanol can reveal the abundance and distribution of the comet-forming ice reservoir in protoplanetary disks. ALMA Cycle 4 observations of four transitions of gas-phase methanol in TW Hya allow the first model-independent determination of the rotational temperature of methanol in a prototoplanetary disk. The data confirm that the methanol is rotationally cold (Trot < 50 K), and well constrain the column density to 2 × 1012 cm−2. Astrochemical models will constrain the chemical origin of methanol in TW Hya.


2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (S314) ◽  
pp. 128-134
Author(s):  
Lucas A. Cieza

AbstractCircumstellar disks are the sites of planet formation, and the very high incidence of extrasolar planets implies that most of them actually form planetary systems. Studying the structure and evolution of protoplanetary disks can thus place important constraints on the conditions, timescales, and mechanisms associated with the planet formation process. In this review, we discuss observational results from infrared and submillimeter wavelength studies. We review disk lifetimes, transition objects, disk demographics, and highlight a few remarkable results from ALMA Early Science observations. We finish with a brief discussion of ALMA's potential to transform the field in near future.


2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (S332) ◽  
pp. 88-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
Merel L. R. van ’t Hoff

AbstractDetermining the locations of the major snowlines in protostellar environments is crucial to fully understand the planet formation process and its outcome. Despite being located far enough from the central star to be spatially resolved with ALMA, the CO snowline remains difficult to detect directly in protoplanetary disks. Instead, its location can be derived from N2H+emission, when chemical effects like photodissociation of CO and N2are taken into account. The water snowline is even harder to observe than that for CO, because in disks it is located only a few AU from the protostar, and from the ground only the less abundant isotopologue H218O can be observed. Therefore, using an indirect chemical tracer, as done for CO, may be the best way to locate the water snowline. A good candidate tracer is HCO+, which is expected to be particularly abundant when its main destructor, H2O, is frozen out. Comparison of H218O and H13CO+emission toward the envelope of the Class 0 protostar IRAS2A shows that the emission from both molecules is spatially anticorrelated, providing a proof of concept that H13CO+can indeed be used to trace the water snowline in systems where it cannot be imaged directly.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (28) ◽  
pp. 16149-16153
Author(s):  
Angela Ciaravella ◽  
Guillermo M. Muñoz Caro ◽  
Antonio Jiménez-Escobar ◽  
Cesare Cecchi-Pestellini ◽  
Li-Chieh Hsiao ◽  
...  

The Atacama Large Millimeter Array has allowed a detailed observation of molecules in protoplanetary disks, which can evolve toward solar systems like our own. While CO,CO2, HCO, andH2COare often abundant species in the cold zones of the disk,CH3OHorCH3CNare only found in a few regions, and more-complex organic molecules are not observed. We simulate, experimentally, ice processing in disks under realistic conditions, that is, layered ices irradiated by soft X-rays. X-ray emission from young solar-type stars is thousands of times brighter than that of today’s sun. The ice mantle is composed of aH2O:CH4:NH3mixture, covered by a layer made ofCH3OHand CO. The photoproducts found desorbing from both ice layers to the gas phase during the irradiation converge with those detected in higher abundances in the gas phase of protoplanetary disks, providing important insights on the nonthermal processes that drive the chemistry in these objects.


2021 ◽  
Vol 922 (2) ◽  
pp. 213
Author(s):  
Romain Basalgète ◽  
Antonio Jesus Ocaña ◽  
Géraldine Féraud ◽  
Claire Romanzin ◽  
Laurent Philippe ◽  
...  

Abstract Pure acetonitrile (CH3CN) and mixed CO:CH3CN and H2O:CH3CN ices have been irradiated at 15 K with vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) photons in the 7–13.6 eV range using synchrotron radiation. VUV photodesorption yields of CH3CN and of photoproducts have been derived as a function of the incident photon energy. The coadsorption of CH3CN with CO and H2O molecules, which are expected to be among the main constituents of interstellar ices, is found to have no significant influence on the VUV photodesorption spectra of CH3CN, CHCN•, HCN, CN•, and CH3•. Contrary to what has generally been evidenced for most of the condensed molecules, these findings point toward a desorption process for which the CH3CN molecule that absorbs the VUV photon is the one desorbing. It can be ejected in the gas phase as intact CH3CN or in the form of its photodissociation fragments. Astrophysical VUV photodesorption yields, applicable to different locations, are derived and can be incorporated into astrochemical modeling. They vary from 0.67(± 0.33) × 10−5 to 2.0(± 1.0) × 10−5 molecule photon−1 for CH3CN depending on the region considered, which is high compared to other organic molecules such as methanol. These results could explain the multiple detections of gas-phase CH3CN in different regions of the interstellar medium and are well correlated to astrophysical observations of the Horsehead nebula and of protoplanetary disks (such as TW Hya and HD 163296).


Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 965
Author(s):  
Zoé Perrin ◽  
Nathalie Carrasco ◽  
Audrey Chatain ◽  
Lora Jovanovic ◽  
Ludovic Vettier ◽  
...  

Titan’s haze is strongly suspected to be an HCN-derived polymer, but despite the first in situ measurements by the ESA-Huygens space probe, its chemical composition and formation process remain largely unknown. To investigate this question, we simulated the atmospheric haze formation process, experimentally. We synthesized analogues of Titan’s haze, named Titan tholins, in an irradiated N2–CH4 gas mixture, mimicking Titan’s upper atmosphere chemistry. HCN was monitored in situ in the gas phase simultaneously with the formation and evolution of the haze particles. We show that HCN is produced as long as the particles are absent, and is then progressively consumed when the particles appear and grow. This work highlights HCN as an effective precursor of Titan’s haze and confirms the HCN-derived polymer nature of the haze.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document