The photodissociation and chemistry of CO isotopologues: applications to interstellar clouds and circumstellar disks
R. Visser (1), E.F. van Dishoeck (1, 2), J.H. Black (3) ((1) Leiden, Observatory, (2) MPE Garching, (3) Onsala Space Observatory)

TL;DR
This study develops an advanced model for CO photodissociation in astrophysical environments, incorporating isotope-specific effects and recent spectroscopic data to better understand molecular abundances and isotope ratios.
Contribution
It introduces the first model including rare isotopologues C17O and 13C17O, with higher accuracy in depth-dependent and isotope-selective photodissociation rates.
Findings
Photodissociation rate is 30% higher than previous estimates.
Temperature and Doppler width significantly affect rates and isotope selectivity.
Model explains observed CO isotope ratios and supports the link to meteorite isotope anomalies.
Abstract
Aims. Photodissociation by UV light is an important destruction mechanism for CO in many astrophysical environments, ranging from interstellar clouds to protoplanetary disks. The aim of this work is to gain a better understanding of the depth dependence and isotope-selective nature of this process. Methods. We present a photodissociation model based on recent spectroscopic data from the literature, which allows us to compute depth-dependent and isotope-selective photodissociation rates at higher accuracy than in previous work. The model includes self-shielding, mutual shielding and shielding by atomic and molecular hydrogen, and it is the first such model to include the rare isotopologues C17O and 13C17O. We couple it to a simple chemical network to analyse CO abundances in diffuse and translucent clouds, photon-dominated regions, and circumstellar disks. Results. The…
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