High D$_2$O/HDO ratio in the inner regions of the low-mass protostar NGC1333 IRAS2A
Audrey Coutens, Jes J{\o}rgensen, Magnus Persson, Ewine van Dishoeck,, Charlotte Vastel, Vianney Taquet

TL;DR
This study reports the first interferometric detection of D₂O in a low-mass protostar, revealing a high D₂O/HDO ratio that challenges existing grain surface chemical models and suggests high-temperature water formation or sublimation processes.
Contribution
It provides the first interferometric detection of D₂O in a solar-type protostar and measures its ratio to HDO, offering new insights into water formation mechanisms in star-forming regions.
Findings
D₂O/HDO ratio is approximately 1.2×10⁻².
HDO/H₂O ratio is approximately 1.7×10⁻³.
Results challenge current grain surface chemical models.
Abstract
Water plays a crucial role both in the interstellar medium and on Earth. To constrain its formation mechanisms and its evolution through the star formation process, the determination of the water deuterium fractionation ratios is particularly suitable. Previous studies derived HDO/HO ratios in the warm inner regions of low-mass protostars. We here report a detection of the DO 1-1 transition toward the low-mass protostar NGC1333 IRAS2A with the Plateau de Bure interferometer: this represents the first interferometric detection of DO - and only the second solar-type protostar for which this isotopologue is detected. Using the observations of the HDO 5-6 transition simultaneously detected and three other HDO lines previously observed, we show that the HDO line fluxes are well reproduced with a single excitation temperature of 21821 K and a…
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