The 3D structure of CO depletion in high-mass prestellar regions
S. Bovino, S. Ferrada-Chamorro, A. Lupi, G. Sabatini, A. Giannetti, D., R. G. Schleicher

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to show that CO depletion occurs rapidly in high-mass star-forming regions, significantly affecting chemical evolution and observational interpretations.
Contribution
First self-consistent MHD simulations with non-equilibrium chemistry reveal rapid CO depletion and its effects on deuteration in high-mass star-forming regions.
Findings
Full CO depletion occurs within a third of the free-fall time.
High deuteration levels develop quickly in the simulated regions.
Observed low deuteration values may hide a full-depletion stage.
Abstract
Disentangling the different stages of the star-formation process, in particular in the high-mass regime, is a challenge in astrophysics. Chemical clocks could help alleviating this problem, but their evolution strongly depends on many parameters, leading to degeneracy in the interpretation of the observational data. One of these uncertainties is the degree of CO depletion. We present here the first self-consistent magneto-hydrodynamic simulations of high-mass star-forming regions at different scales, fully coupled with a non-equilibrium chemical network, which includes C-N-O bearing molecules. Depletion and desorption processes are treated time-dependently. The results show that full CO-depletion (i.e. all gas-phase CO frozen-out on the surface of dust grains), can be reached very quickly, in one third or even smaller fractions of the free-fall time, whether the collapse proceeds on…
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