The role of OH in the chemical evolution of protoplanetary disks II. Gas-rich environments
Germ\'an Chaparro Molano, Inga Kamp

TL;DR
This paper introduces a method to incorporate gas extinction of cosmic-ray-induced UV photons into chemical models of protoplanetary disk midplanes, improving understanding of ice formation and chemical evolution.
Contribution
It presents a novel approach to include gas opacities in chemical models, identifying key gas-phase species affecting UV photon attenuation in protoplanetary disks.
Findings
Gas contributes significantly to opacity at 1-8 AU, up to 28.2%.
Main gas contributors are CO, CO₂, S, SiO, and O₂.
Gas opacity drops to 6% beyond 10-15 AU due to freeze-out.
Abstract
Context. We present a method for including gas extinction of cosmic-ray-generated UV photons in chemical models of the midplane of protoplanetary disks, focusing on its implications on ice formation and chemical evolution. Aims. Our goal is to improve on chemical models by treating cosmic rays, the main source of ionization in the midplane of the disk, in a way that is consistent with current knowledge of the gas and grain environment present in those regions. We trace the effects of cosmic rays by identifying the main chemical reaction channels and also the main contributors to the gas opacity to cosmic-ray-induced UV photons. This information is crucial in implementing gas opacities for cosmic-ray-induced reactions in full 2D protoplanetary disk models. Methods. We considered time-dependent chemical models within the range 1-10 AU in the midplane of a T Tauri disk. The extinction of…
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