X-ray photodesorption and proton destruction in protoplanetary disks: pyrimidine
E. Mendoza, G. C. Almeida, D.P.P Andrade, H. Luna, W. Wolff, M. L. M., Rocco, H. M. Boechat-Roberty

TL;DR
This study investigates how X-ray photons and protons affect pyrimidine molecules in protoplanetary disks, revealing ionization, dissociation, and desorption processes relevant to astrochemical evolution.
Contribution
It provides experimental data on pyrimidine's response to X-ray and proton irradiation, applying findings to model ion production in protoplanetary disks.
Findings
Partial photodesorption ion yields depend on photon energy.
HC3NH+ ion production rates range from 10^-31 to 10^-8 ions cm^-3 s^-1.
Estimated column densities of HC3NH+ vary with distance from the star.
Abstract
The organic compounds HCN and C2H2, present in protoplanetary disks, may react to form precursor molecules of the nucleobases, such as the pyrimidine molecule, C4H4N2. Depending on the temperature in a given region of the disk, molecules are in the gas phase or condensed onto grain surfaces. The action of X-ray photons and MeV protons, emitted by the young central star, may lead to several physical and chemical processes in such prestellar environments. In this work we have experimentally investigated the ionization, dissociation and desorption processes of pyrimidine in the condensed and the gas phase stimulated by soft X-rays and protons, respectively. Pyrimidine was frozen at temperatures below 130 K and irradiated with X-rays at energies from 394 to 427 eV. In the gas phase experiment, a pyrimidine effusive jet at room temperature was bombarded with protons of 2.5 MeV. In both…
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