Imaging the water snowline in a protostellar envelope with H$^{13}$CO$^+$
Merel L.R. van 't Hoff, Magnus V. Persson, Daniel Harsono, Vianney, Taquet, Jes K. J{\o}rgensen, Ruud Visser, Edwin A. Bergin, Ewine F. van, Dishoeck

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that H$^{13}$CO$^+$ emission can effectively trace the water snowline in a protostellar envelope, providing observational constraints crucial for understanding planet formation.
Contribution
It introduces H$^{13}$CO$^+$ as a new chemical tracer for the water snowline in protostellar environments, supported by observational and chemical modeling evidence.
Findings
H$^{13}$CO$^+$ peaks offset from the protostar, indicating snowline location.
Water snowline is at 225 AU, farther than predicted by simple models.
DCO$^+$ traces the CO snowline at expected position.
Abstract
Snowlines are key ingredients for planet formation. Providing observational constraints on the locations of the major snowlines is therefore crucial for fully connecting planet compositions to their formation mechanism. Unfortunately, the most important snowline, that of water, is very difficult to observe directly in protoplanetary disks due to its close proximity to the central star. Based on chemical considerations, HCO is predicted to be a good chemical tracer of the water snowline, because it is particularly abundant in dense clouds when water is frozen out. This work maps the optically thin isotopologue HCO () toward the envelope of the low-mass protostar NGC1333-IRAS2A (observed with NOEMA at ~0.9" resolution), where the snowline is at larger distance from the star than in disks. The HCO emission peaks ~2" northeast of the continuum peak, whereas…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
