Exploring the Origins of Earth's Nitrogen: Astronomical Observations of Nitrogen-bearing Organics in Protostellar Environments
Thomas S. Rice, Edwin A. Bergin, Jes K. J{\o}rgensen, and S. F., Wampfler

TL;DR
This study investigates the origins of Earth's nitrogen by analyzing Herschel observations of nitrogen-bearing organics in protostellar environments, suggesting refractory dust as the main nitrogen source for comets and possibly Earth.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of HCN abundance, sublimation temperature, and binding energy in protostellar envelopes, and compares organic nitrogen content to cometary nitrogen, proposing dust as the primary nitrogen carrier.
Findings
HCN contains about 74% of nitrogen in Orion KL.
Measured HCN sublimation temperature is 71 K.
Refractory dust likely supplied nitrogen to comets and Earth.
Abstract
It is not known whether the original carriers of Earth's nitrogen were molecular ices or refractory dust. To investigate this question, we have used data and results of Herschel observations towards two protostellar sources: the high-mass hot core of Orion KL, and the low-mass protostar IRAS 16293-2422. Towards Orion KL, our analysis of the molecular inventory of Crockett et al. (2014) indicates that HCN is the organic molecule that contains by far the most nitrogen, carrying of nitrogen-in-organics. Following this evidence, we explore HCN towards IRAS 16293-2422, which we consider a solar analog. Towards IRAS 16293-2422, we have reduced and analyzed Herschel spectra of HCN, and fit these observations against "jump" abundance models of IRAS 16293-2422's protostellar envelope. We find an inner-envelope HCN abundance and an…
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.
