Ices in starless and starforming cores
Karin I. Oberg, A. C. Adwin Boogert, Klaus M. Pontoppidan, Saskia van, den Broek, Ewine F. van Dishoeck, Sandrine Bottinelli, Geoffrey A. Blake and, Neal J. Evans II

TL;DR
This paper reviews observational and experimental data on ices in starless and star-forming cores, revealing their formation stages, composition, and evolution during star and planet formation.
Contribution
It synthesizes a large dataset of ice observations across star formation stages, applying empirical, experimental, and modeling approaches to understand ice chemistry and evolution.
Findings
Prestellar ice formation occurs in two phases: H2O and CO ice formation.
Most protostellar ice variation is due to differences in prestellar CO ice formation.
Ice observations combined with experiments and models help constrain complex ice chemistry.
Abstract
Icy grain mantles are commonly observed through infrared spectroscopy toward dense clouds, cloud cores, protostellar envelopes and protoplanetary disks. Up to 80% of the available oxygen, carbon and nitrogen are found in such ices; the most common ice constituents - H2O, CO2 and CO - are second in abundance only to H2 in many star forming regions. In addition to being a molecular reservoir, ice chemistry is responsible for much of the chemical evolution from H2O to complex, prebiotic molecules. Combining the existing ISO, Spitzer, VLT and Keck ice data results in a large sample of ice sources (\sime80) that span all stages of star formation and a large range of protostellar luminosities (<0.1-105 L\odot). Here we summarize the different techniques that have been applied to mine this ice data set on information on typical ice compositions in different environments and what this implies…
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