Methanol formation in TW Hya and future prospects for detecting larger complex molecules in disks with ALMA
Catherine Walsh (1,2), Shreyas Vissapragada (2,3), Harry McGee (1), ((1) School of Physics, Astronomy, University of Leeds, UK, (2) Leiden, Observatory, The Netherlands, (3) Columbia Astrophysics Laboratory, Columbia, University, USA)

TL;DR
This study models methanol chemistry in the TW Hya protoplanetary disk, compares predictions with ALMA observations, and explores prospects for detecting larger complex molecules with improved methods.
Contribution
It introduces an updated chemical model including new formation pathways and fragmentation, improving agreement with observations and assessing detection strategies for complex molecules.
Findings
Including photodesorption fragmentation improves model-observation agreement.
Predicted emission peaks are farther out than observed, indicating model limitations.
Stacking multiple transitions can enhance detection of complex molecules with ALMA.
Abstract
Gas-phase methanol was recently detected in a protoplanetary disk for the first time with ALMA. The peak abundance and distribution of methanol observed in TW Hya differed from that predicted by chemical models. Here, the chemistry of methanol gas and ice is calculated using a physical model tailored for TW Hya with the aim to contrast the results with the recent detection in this source. New pathways for the formation of larger complex molecules (e.g., ethylene glycol) are included in an updated chemical model, as well as the fragmentation of methanol ice upon photodesorption. It is found that including fragmentation upon photodesorption improves the agreement between the peak abundance reached in the chemical models with that observed in TW Hya ( with respect to \ce{H2}); however, the model predicts that the peak in emission resides a factor of farther out in the…
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