Chemical differentiation in regions of high mass star formation II. Molecular multiline and dust continuum studies of selected objects
I. Zinchenko, P. Caselli, L. Pirogov

TL;DR
This study investigates chemical differentiation in high-mass star-forming regions by analyzing molecular line emissions and dust continuum, revealing systematic abundance variations linked to physical conditions and embedded young stellar objects.
Contribution
It provides detailed molecular abundance and physical parameter measurements across multiple high-mass star-forming regions, highlighting chemical differentiation patterns and their relation to star formation activity.
Findings
Molecular abundances of CO, CS, and HCN are relatively constant.
HCO+, HNC, and N2H+ abundances vary significantly and decrease near YSOs.
Ionization fraction slightly increases towards embedded young stellar objects.
Abstract
The aim of this study is to investigate systematic chemical differentiation of molecules in regions of high mass star formation. We observed five prominent sites of high mass star formation in HCN, HNC, HCO+, their isotopes, C18O, C34S and some other molecular lines, for some sources both at 3 and 1.3 mm and in continuum at 1.3 mm. Taking into account earlier obtained data for N2H+ we derive molecular abundances and physical parameters of the sources (mass, density, ionization fraction, etc.). The kinetic temperature is estimated from CH3C2H observations. Then we analyze correlations between molecular abundances and physical parameters and discuss chemical models applicable to these species. The typical physical parameters for the sources in our sample are the following: kinetic temperature in the range ~ 30-50 K (it is systematically higher than that obtained from ammonia observations…
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