Linking interstellar and cometary O$_2$: a deep search for $^{16}$O$^{18}$O in the solar-type protostar IRAS 16293--2422
Vianney Taquet, Ewine F. van Dishoeck, Matthew Swayne, Daniel Harsono,, Jes K. J{\o}rgensen, Luke Maud, Niels F. W. Ligterink, Holger S. P. M\"uller,, Claudio Codella, Kathrin Altwegg, Andre Bieler, Audrey Coutens, Maria N., Drozdovskaya, Kenji Furuya, Magnus V. Persson

TL;DR
This study searches for molecular oxygen isotopologues in a protostar's environment to compare interstellar O$_2$ abundance with that found in comets, providing insights into the origin of Solar System volatiles.
Contribution
It presents a deep ALMA search for $^{16}$O$^{18}$O in a protostar, offering the first constraints on interstellar O$_2$ abundance related to Solar System materials.
Findings
Residual emission suggests a tentative detection of $^{16}$O$^{18}$O.
The O$_2$/CH$_3$OH ratio in the protostar is lower than in comet 67P/C-G.
Lower temperature in the protostar's precursor cloud may inhibit O$_2$ formation.
Abstract
Recent measurements carried out at comet 67P/C-G with the probe revealed that molecular oxygen, O, is the fourth most abundant molecule in comets. Models show that O is likely of primordial nature, coming from the interstellar cloud from which our Solar System was formed. However, gaseous O is an elusive molecule in the interstellar medium with only one detection towards quiescent molecular clouds, in the Oph A core. We perform a deep search for molecular oxygen, through the rotational transition at 234 GHz of its OO isotopologue, towards the warm compact gas surrounding the nearby Class 0 protostar IRAS 16293--2422 B with the ALMA interferometer. The targeted OO transition is surrounded by two brighter transitions at km s relative to the expected OO transition frequency. After…
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