The chemistry of protoplanetary fragments formed via gravitational instabilities
J. D. Ilee, D. H. Forgan, M. G. Evans, C. Hall, R. Booth, C. J., Clarke, W. K. M. Rice, A. C. Boley, P. Caselli, T. W. Hartquist, J. M. C., Rawlings

TL;DR
This study models the chemical evolution of a protoplanetary disc undergoing gravitational fragmentation, identifying key chemical species in different disc regions and implications for planetary atmospheres.
Contribution
It introduces a combined hydrodynamical and chemical modeling approach to study chemical evolution during disc fragmentation, highlighting potential variations in planetary atmospheres.
Findings
Identified species abundant in fragments, shocks, and circumfragmentary material.
Suggested grain sedimentation can alter planetary atmospheric composition.
Predicted planetary atmospheres may differ from local disc chemistry.
Abstract
In this paper, we model the chemical evolution of a 0.25 M protoplanetary disc surrounding a 1 M star that undergoes fragmentation due to self-gravity. We use Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics including a radiative transfer scheme, along with time-dependent chemical evolution code to follow the composition of the disc and resulting fragments over approximately 4000 yrs. Initially, four quasi-stable fragments are formed, of which two are eventually disrupted by tidal torques in the disc. From the results of our chemical modelling, we identify species that are abundant in the fragments (e.g. HO, HS, HNO, N, NH, OCS, SO), species that are abundant in the spiral shocks within the disc (e.g. CO, CH, CN, CS, HCO), and species which are abundant in the circumfragmentary material (e.g. HCO). Our models…
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