Observations of nitrogen isotope fractionation in deeply embedded protostars
S. F. Wampfler, J. K. Jorgensen, M. Bizzarro, S. E. Bisschop

TL;DR
This study measures nitrogen isotope ratios in embedded protostars, revealing 15N-enrichment in some sources and suggesting a possible temperature-dependent fractionation process, advancing understanding of nitrogen chemistry in star formation.
Contribution
First observational evidence of nitrogen isotope fractionation in embedded protostars using multiple molecular tracers, supporting chemical fractionation models.
Findings
Two protostars show 15N-enrichment by a factor of 1.5-2.5.
Indications of increasing 14N/15N ratios with higher envelope temperatures.
Results are consistent with chemical fractionation, but further data needed.
Abstract
(Abridged) The terrestrial planets, comets, and meteorites are significantly enriched in 15N compared to the Sun and Jupiter. While the solar and jovian nitrogen isotope ratio is believed to represent the composition of the protosolar nebula, a still unidentified process has caused 15N-enrichment in the solids. Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain the variations, including chemical fractionation. However, observational results that constrain the fractionation models are scarce. While there is evidence of 15N-enrichment in prestellar cores, it is unclear how the signature evolves into the protostellar phases. Our aim is to measure the 14N/15N ratio around three nearby, embedded low-to-intermediate-mass protostars. Isotopologues of HCN and HNC were used to probe the 14N/15N ratio. A selection of H13CN, HC15N, HN13C, and H15NC transitions was observed with the APEX telescope.…
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