HD depletion in starless cores
O. Sipil\"a, P. Caselli, J. Harju

TL;DR
This study models the chemical evolution of starless cores, revealing that HD depletes from the gas phase due to grain-surface chemistry, affecting light deuterium species and their spin states, with implications for core evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive gas-grain chemical model including deuterium and spin states, highlighting the impact of HD depletion on deuterium chemistry in starless cores.
Findings
HD depletes from the gas phase due to grain-surface HDO formation.
H2D+ and D2H+ abundances increase towards core edges at late stages.
HD depletion timescale varies with initial oxygen abundance.
Abstract
Aims: We aim to investigate the abundances of light deuterium-bearing species such as HD, H2D+ and D2H+ in a gas-grain chemical model including an extensive description of deuterium and spin state chemistry, in physical conditions appropriate to the very centers of starless cores. Methods: We combine a gas-grain chemical model with radiative transfer calculations to simulate density and temperature structure in starless cores. The chemical model includes deuterated forms of species with up to 4 atoms and the spin states of the light species H2, H2+ and H3+ and their deuterated forms. Results: We find that HD eventually depletes from the gas phase because deuterium is efficiently incorporated to grain-surface HDO, resulting in inefficient HD production on grains. HD depletion has consequences not only on the abundances of e.g. H2D+ and D2H+, whose production depends on the abundance of…
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