Deuteration and evolution in the massive star formation process: the role of surface chemistry
F. Fontani, G. Busquet, Aina Palau, P. Caselli, A., Sanchez-Monge,, J.C. Tan, M. Audard

TL;DR
This study investigates how deuterated molecules formed in gas and on grain surfaces evolve during massive star formation, highlighting the importance of surface chemistry and identifying key molecular tracers for different evolutionary stages.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence quantifying the role of surface chemistry in deuteration processes across star formation stages, using multi-molecular data from IRAM-30m and GBT telescopes.
Findings
NH2D detected in most cores regardless of stage
Dfrac(NH3) remains above 0.1 across evolution
High Dfrac(CH3OH) indicates early protostellar phases
Abstract
An ever growing number of observational and theoretical evidence suggests that the deuterated fraction (column density ratio between a species containing D and its hydrogenated counterpart, Dfrac) is an evolutionary indicator both in the low- and the high-mass star formation process. However, the role of surface chemistry in these studies has not been quantified from an observational point of view. In order to compare how the deuterated fractions of species formed only in the gas and partially or uniquely on grain surfaces evolve with time, we observed rotational transitions of CH3OH, 13CH3OH, CH2DOH, CH3OD at 3 and 1.3~mm, and of NH2D at 3~mm with the IRAM-30m telescope, and the inversion transitions (1,1) and (2,2) of NH3 with the GBT, towards most of the cores already observed by Fontani et al.~(2011, 2014) in N2H+, N2D+, HNC, DNC. NH2D is detected in all but two cores, regardless of…
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