The chemical history of molecules in circumstellar disks. II. Gas-phase species
R. Visser (1, 2), S.D. Doty (3), E.F. van Dishoeck (1, 4), ((1), Leiden Observatory, (2) Univ. of Michigan, (3) Denison Univ., (4) MPE, Garching)

TL;DR
This study models the chemical evolution from pre-stellar cores to circumstellar disks in two dimensions, revealing that disk chemistry is influenced by collapse processes and varies across different regions, affecting comet composition.
Contribution
First 2D chemodynamical model tracing chemical evolution from core to disk, highlighting non-equilibrium states and diverse chemical histories in disks.
Findings
Collapse chemistry is dominated by CO evaporation and H2O photodissociation.
Disks contain zones with distinct chemical histories.
Comets originate from material with varying degrees of chemical processing.
Abstract
Context: The chemical composition of a molecular cloud changes dramatically as it collapses to form a low-mass protostar and circumstellar disk. Two-dimensional (2D) chemodynamical models are required to properly study this process. Aims: The goal of this work is to follow, for the first time, the chemical evolution in two dimensions all the way from a pre-stellar core into a circumstellar disk. Of special interest is the question whether the chemical composition of the disk is a result of chemical processing during the collapse phase, or whether it is determined by in situ processing after the disk has formed. Methods: Our model combines a semi-analytical method to get 2D axisymmetric density and velocity structures with detailed radiative transfer calculations to get temperature profiles and UV fluxes. Material is followed in from the core to the disk and a full gas-phase…
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