Modeling the processing of interstellar ices by energetic particles
Juris Kalv\=ans, Ivar Shmeld

TL;DR
This paper develops a model of interstellar ice chemistry considering layered structure and energetic particle processing, revealing effects on hydrogen content, deuterium enrichment, and implications for ice chemistry evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a layered ice model with subsurface reactions and diffusion, providing new insights into chemical processing and deuterium fractionation in interstellar ices.
Findings
Subsurface processes reduce chemically bound hydrogen by ~30%.
Deuterium enrichment in ice is delayed and reduced.
Ice processing constrains formation of deuterated species and radical-driven explosions.
Abstract
Context. Interstellar ice is the main form of metal species in dark molecular clouds. Experiments and observations have shown that the ice is significantly processed after the freeze-out of molecules onto grains. The processing is caused by cosmic-ray particles and cosmic-ray-induced UV photons. These transformations are included in current astrochemical models only to a very limited degree. Aims. We aim to establish a model of the "cold" chemistry in interstellar ices and to evaluate its general impact on the composition of interstellar ices. Methods. The ice was treated as consisting of two layers - the surface and the mantle (or subsurface) layer. Subsurface chemical processes are described with photodissociation of ice species and binary reactions on the surfaces of cavities inside the mantle. Hydrogen atoms and molecules can diffuse between the layers. We also included deuterium…
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