The chemical structure of young high-mass star-forming clumps: (I) Deuteration
S. Feng, P. Caselli, K. Wang, Y. Lin, H. Beuther, and O. Sipil\"a

TL;DR
This study investigates the chemical structure and deuteration processes in high-mass star-forming clumps, revealing how environmental factors influence molecular deuteration and comparing early high-mass star formation chemistry with low-mass regions.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational insights into deuteration in high-mass star-forming clumps and compares chemical processes across different evolutionary stages and environments.
Findings
Deuteration of N2H+ is more efficient than other molecules.
Deuteration is higher in the younger, colder clump S.
Single deuteration of NH3 is insensitive to environmental differences.
Abstract
The chemical structure of high-mass star nurseries is important for a general understanding of star formation. Deuteration is a key chemical process in the earliest stages of star formation because its efficiency is sensitive to the environment. Using the IRAM-30 m telescope at 1.3--4.3 mm wavelengths, we have imaged two parsec-scale high-mass protostellar clumps (P1 and S) that show different evolutionary stages but are located in the same giant filamentary {infrared dark cloud} G28.34+0.06. Deep spectral images at subparsec resolution reveal the dust and gas physical structures of both clumps. We find that (1) the low- lines of , HCN, HNC, and isotopologues are subthermally excited; and (2) the deuteration of is more efficient than that of , HCN, and HNC by an order of magnitude. The deuterations of these species are enriched toward…
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