Gas-phase CO depletion and N2H+ abundances in starless cores
N. Lippok, R. Launhardt, D. Semenov, A. M. Stutz, Z. Balog, Th., Henning, O. Krause, H. Linz, M. Nielbock, Ya. N. Pavlyuchenkov, M. Schmalzl,, A. Schmiedeke, and H. J. Bieging

TL;DR
This study investigates the chemical composition and physical structure of starless cores, revealing how CO depletion correlates with density and N2H+ abundance, and providing insights into core evolution and chemical timescales.
Contribution
It combines continuum and molecular line observations with chemical modeling to confirm CO freezeout and nitrogen chemistry in starless cores, offering new insights into their physical and chemical evolution.
Findings
CO is frozen onto grains in core centers, with depletion up to 95%.
N2H+ abundance peaks at intermediate densities before declining.
Core chemical ages are estimated to be less than 1 million years.
Abstract
Seven isolated, nearby low-mass starless molecular cloud cores have been observed as part of the Herschel key program Earliest Phases of Star formation (EPoS). By applying a ray-tracing technique to the obtained continuum emission and complementary (sub)mm emission maps, we derive the physical structure (density, dust temperature) of these cloud cores. We present observations of the 12CO, 13CO, and C18O (2-1) and N2H+ (1-0) transitions towards the same cores. Based on the density and temperature profiles, we apply time-dependent chemical and line-radiative transfer modeling and compare the modeled to the observed molecular emission profiles. CO is frozen onto the grains in the center of all cores in our sample. The level of CO depletion increases with hydrogen density and ranges from 46% up to more than 95% in the core centers in the core centers in the three cores with the highest…
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