2015MNRAS.451.3836D


Query : 2015MNRAS.451.3836D

2015MNRAS.451.3836D - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 451, 3836-3856 (2015/August-3)

The complex chemistry of outflow cavity walls exposed: the case of low-mass protostars.

DROZDOVSKAYA M.N., WALSH C., VISSER R., HARSONO D. and VAN DISHOECK E.F.

Abstract (from CDS):

Complex organic molecules are ubiquitous companions of young low-mass protostars. Recent observations suggest that their emission stems, not only from the traditional hot corino, but also from offset positions. In this work, 2D physicochemical modelling of an envelope-cavity system is carried out. Wavelength-dependent radiative transfer calculations are performed and a comprehensive gas-grain chemical network is used to simulate the physical and chemical structure. The morphology of the system delineates three distinct regions: the cavity wall layer with time-dependent and species-variant enhancements; a torus rich in complex organic ices, but not reflected in gas-phase abundances and the remaining outer envelope abundant in simpler solid and gaseous molecules. Strongly irradiated regions, such as the cavity wall layer, are subject to frequent photodissociation in the solid phase. Subsequent recombination of the photoproducts leads to frequent reactive desorption, causing gas-phase enhancements of several orders of magnitude. This mechanism remains to be quantified with laboratory experiments. Direct photodesorption is found to be relatively inefficient. If radicals are not produced directly in the icy mantle, the formation of complex organics is impeded. For efficiency, a sufficient number of FUV photons needs to penetrate the envelope, and elevated cool dust temperatures need to enable grain-surface radical mobility. As a result, a high stellar luminosity and a sufficiently wide cavity favour chemical complexity. Furthermore within this paradigm, complex organics are demonstrated to have unique lifetimes and be grouped into early (formaldehyde, ketene, methanol, formic acid, methyl formate, acetic acid and glycolaldehyde) and late (acetaldehyde, dimethyl ether and ethanol) species.

Abstract Copyright: © 2015 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society (2015)

Journal keyword(s): astrochemistry - stars: protostars

Simbad objects: 19

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Number of rows : 19
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 [JCC87] IRAS 2A Y*O 03 28 55.55 +31 14 36.7           ~ 459 3
2 [JCC87] IRAS 4A Y*O 03 29 10.49 +31 13 30.8           ~ 715 1
3 [JCC87] IRAS 4 FIR 03 29 10.9 +31 13 26           ~ 478 0
4 [JCC87] IRAS 4B Y*O 03 29 12.058 +31 13 02.05           ~ 600 0
5 [HKM99] B1-b cor 03 33 20.32 +31 07 21.5           ~ 212 0
6 LDN 1544 DNe 05 04 16.6 +25 10 48           ~ 863 0
7 NAME HH 46-47 HH 08 25 43.6 -51 00 36           ~ 201 2
8 LDN 183 MoC 15 54 12.2 -02 49 42           ~ 759 1
9 IRAS 16293-2422 cor 16 32 22.56 -24 28 31.8           ~ 1252 1
10 NAME IRAS 16293-2422B Y*O 16 32 22.63 -24 28 31.8           ~ 283 0
11 NAME IRAS 16293-2422A Y*O 16 32 22.869 -24 28 36.11           ~ 167 0
12 LDN 1689B DNe 16 34 42.1 -24 36 11           ~ 167 0
13 IRAS 16547-4247 Y*O 16 58 17.208 -42 52 08.16           ~ 161 0
14 [KVV2010] SMM4-W out 18 29 11.60 +01 13 18.1           ~ 8 0
15 GCNM 23 Y*O 18 29 49.63 +01 15 21.9           ~ 273 2
16 [HCP2006] Cluster A Cld 18 29 56 +01 14.8           ~ 48 0
17 NAME Serpens SMM 4 cor 18 29 57.1 +01 13 15           ~ 137 0
18 NAME LDN 1157-mm Y*O 20 39 06.2 +68 02 15           ~ 189 0
19 IRAS 23118+6110 Y*O 23 14 02.09473 +61 27 18.8460           ~ 376 0

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