Water vapor toward starless cores: the Herschel view
P.Caselli, E.Keto, L. Pagani, Y. Aikawa, U.A. Yildiz, F.F.S. van der, Tak, M. Tafalla, E.A. Bergin, B. Nisini, C. Codella, E.F. van Dishoeck, R., Bachiller, A. Baudry, M. Benedettini, A.O. Benz, P. Bjerkeli, G.A. Blake, S., Bontemps, J. Braine, S. Bruderer, J. Cernicharo

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel's high-resolution observations to measure water vapor in starless cores, revealing low abundances and a peak away from the core center, advancing understanding of water chemistry before star formation.
Contribution
First direct measurement of water vapor in dark, starless cores, showing its distribution and abundance profile with Herschel's improved sensitivity.
Findings
Water vapor abundance in L1544 is about 5x10^-9 at radii >7000 AU.
No significant water vapor detected in B68, with upper limits below previous constraints.
Water vapor peaks away from the core center, indicating complex chemical processes.
Abstract
SWAS and Odin provided stringent upper limits on the gas phase water abundance of dark clouds (x(H2O) < 7x10^-9). We investigate the chemistry of water vapor in starless cores beyond the previous upper limits using the highly improved angular resolution and sensitivity of Herschel and measure the abundance of water vapor during evolutionary stages just preceding star formation. High spectral resolution observations of the fundamental ortho water (o-H2O) transition (557 GHz) were carried out with Herschel HIFI toward two starless cores: B68, a Bok globule, and L1544, a prestellar core embedded in the Taurus molecular cloud complex. The rms in the brightness temperature measured for the B68 and L1544 spectra is 2.0 and 2.2 mK, respectively, in a velocity bin of 0.59 km s^-1. The continuum level is 3.5+/-0.2 mK in B68 and 11.4+/-0.4 mK in L1544. No significant feature is detected in B68…
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