Probing the CO and methanol snow lines in young protostars. Results from the CALYPSO IRAM-PdBI survey
S. Anderl, S. Maret, S. Cabrit, A. Belloche, A. J. Maury, Ph. Andr\'e,, C. Codella, A. Bacmann, S. Bontemps, L. Podio, F. Gueth, E. Bergin

TL;DR
This study investigates the locations of CO and methanol snow lines in young protostars to understand their chemical and thermal structures, revealing high CO binding energies and low CO abundances that suggest early chemical evolution.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence of snow line locations in Class 0 protostars and models their chemistry, highlighting higher CO binding energies and low CO abundances in early star formation stages.
Findings
Anti-correlation of C$^{18}$O and N$_2$H$^+$ emissions around protostars.
CO binding energy of 1200 K suggests ice in amorphous water or CO$_2$-rich ice.
Low CO abundances inside snow lines, similar to protoplanetary disks.
Abstract
Context. "Snow lines", marking regions where abundant volatiles freeze out onto the surface of dust grains, play an important role for planet growth and bulk composition in protoplanetary disks. They can already be observed in the envelopes of the much younger, low-mass Class 0 protostars that are still in their early phase of heavy accretion. Aims. We aim at using the information on the sublimation regions of different kinds of ices to understand the chemistry of the envelope, its temperature and density structure, and the history of the accretion process. Methods. As part of the CALYPSO IRAM Large Program, we have obtained observations of CO, NH and CHOH towards nearby Class 0 protostars with the IRAM Plateau de Bure interferometer at sub-arcsecond resolution. For four of these sources we have modeled the emission using a chemical code coupled with a radiative…
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