Complex organic molecules along the accretion flow in isolated and externally irradiated protoplanetary disks
Catherine Walsh (1), Eric Herbst (2), Hideko Nomura (3), T. J. Millar, (4), Susanna Widicus Weaver (5) ((1) Leiden Observatory, (2) University of, Virginia, (3) Tokyo Institute of Technology, (4) Queen's University Belfast,, (5) Emory University)

TL;DR
This study models the formation and distribution of complex organic molecules in protoplanetary disks under isolated and externally irradiated conditions, revealing how environment influences chemical complexity relevant to prebiotic chemistry.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of COM chemistry in different disk environments, highlighting the impact of external irradiation on molecular synthesis and transport.
Findings
COMs are transported inward without major change in isolated disks.
External irradiation reduces COM abundance due to thermal processing.
Gas-phase COMs form in irradiated disks via gas-phase chemistry, not surface reactions.
Abstract
(Abridged) The birth environment of the Sun will have influenced the conditions in the pre-solar nebula, including the attainable chemical complexity, important for prebiotic chemistry. The formation and distribution of complex organic molecules (COMs) in a disk around a T Tauri star is investigated for two scenarios: (i) an isolated disk, and (ii) a disk irradiated externally by a nearby massive star. The chemistry is calculated along the accretion flow from the outer disk inwards using a comprehensive network. Two simulations are performed, one beginning with complex ices and one with simple ices only. For the isolated disk, COMs are transported without major alteration into the inner disk where they thermally desorb into the gas reaching an abundance representative of the initial assumed ice abundance. For simple ices, COMs efficiently form on grain surfaces under the conditions in…
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