Water deuterium fractionation in the low-mass protostar NGC1333-IRAS2A
F.-C. Liu, B. Parise, L. Kristensen, R. Visser, E.F. van Dishoeck, and, R. G\"usten

TL;DR
This study measures water deuterium fractionation in the low-mass protostar NGC1333-IRAS2A, revealing higher HDO/H2O ratios than in comets, which suggests significant reprocessing of material during star and planet formation.
Contribution
First measurement of water deuterium fractionation in NGC1333-IRAS2A, comparing it to IRAS 16293-2422, and implications for chemical processing in star formation.
Findings
HDO/H2O ratio in the inner envelope exceeds 1%
Outer envelope HDO/H2O ratio ranges from 0.9% to 18%
Similar HDO abundances in two different protostars
Abstract
Although deuterium enrichment of water may provide an essential piece of information in the understanding of the formation of comets and protoplanetary systems, only a few studies up to now have aimed at deriving the HDO/H2O ratio in low-mass star forming regions. Previous studies of the molecular deuteration toward the solar-type class 0 protostar, IRAS 16293-2422, have shown that the D/H ratio of water is significantly lower than other grain-surface-formed molecules. It is not clear if this property is general or particular to this source. In order to see if the results toward IRAS 16293-2422 are particular, we aimed at studying water deuterium fractionation in a second low-mass solar-type protostar, NGC1333-IRAS2A. Using the 1-D radiative transfer code RATRAN, we analyzed five HDO transitions observed with the IRAM 30m, JCMT, and APEX telescopes. We assumed that the abundance profile…
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