First detection of gas-phase ammonia in a planet-forming disk
Vachail N. Salinas, Michiel R. Hogerheijde, Edwin A. Bergin, L., Ilsedore Cleeves, Christian Brinch, Geoffrey A. Blake, Dariusz C. Lis, Gary, J. Melnick, Olja Pani\'c, John C. Pearson, Lars Kristensen, Umut A., Y{\i}ld{\i}z, Ewine F. van Dishoeck

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of gas-phase ammonia in a planet-forming disk, using Herschel observations, and models its abundance relative to water to understand nitrogen chemistry in early solar system environments.
Contribution
First detection of gas-phase ammonia in a protoplanetary disk, with detailed modeling of its distribution and abundance relative to water vapor.
Findings
Detected ammonia in TW Hya disk for the first time.
Inferred ammonia-to-water ratio varies from 7% to 84%.
Most consistent with compact, settled disk configurations.
Abstract
Nitrogen chemistry in protoplanetary disks and the freeze-out on dust particles is key to understand the formation of nitrogen bearing species in early solar system analogs. So far, ammonia has not been detected beyond the snowline in protoplanetary disks. We aim to find gas-phase ammonia in a protoplanetary disk and characterize its abundance with respect to water vapor. Using HIFI on the Herschel Space Observatory we detect, for the first time, the ground-state rotational emission of ortho-NH in a protoplanetary disk, around TW Hya. We use detailed models of the disk's physical structure and the chemistry of ammonia and water to infer the amounts of gas-phase molecules of these species. We explore two radial distributions ( confined to 60 au like the millimeter-sized grains) and two vertical distributions (near the midplane where water is expected to photodesorb off icy grains)…
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