Depletion of chlorine into HCl ice in a protostellar core
M. Kama, E. Caux, A. Lopez-Sepulcre, V. Wakelam, C. Dominik, C., Ceccarelli, M. Lanza, F. Lique, B.B. Ochsendorf, D.C. Lis, R.N. Caballero,, A.G.G.M. Tielens

TL;DR
This study investigates chlorine depletion in a protostellar core by observing HCl and H2Cl+ lines, revealing most chlorine is locked in ice, with implications for core chemistry and elemental ratios.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of chlorine depletion in a protostellar core using Herschel observations and advanced chemical models.
Findings
Gas-phase HCl abundance is extremely low, indicating most chlorine is in ice form.
H2Cl+ traces a foreground cloud with no chlorine depletion.
The 35Cl/37Cl ratio matches the solar system value.
Abstract
The freezeout of gas-phase species onto cold dust grains can drastically alter the chemistry and the heating-cooling balance of protostellar material. In contrast to well-known species such as carbon monoxide (CO), the freezeout of various carriers of elements with abundances has not yet been well studied. Our aim here is to study the depletion of chlorine in the protostellar core, OMC-2 FIR 4. We observed transitions of HCl and H2Cl+ towards OMC-2 FIR 4 using the Herschel Space Observatory and Caltech Submillimeter Observatory facilities. Our analysis makes use of state of the art chlorine gas-grain chemical models and newly calculated HCl-H hyperfine collisional excitation rate coefficients. A narrow emission component in the HCl lines traces the extended envelope, and a broad one traces a more compact central region. The gas-phase HCl abundance in FIR 4 is 9e-11, a…
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