Vacuum ultraviolet photoabsorption spectroscopy of space-related ices: 1 keV electron irradiation of nitrogen- and oxygen-rich ices
S. Ioppolo, Z. Kanuchov\'a, R. L. James, A. Dawes, N. C. Jones, S. V., Hoffmann, N. J. Mason, and G. Strazzulla

TL;DR
This study provides VUV photoabsorption spectra of nitrogen- and oxygen-rich ices subjected to 1 keV electron irradiation, revealing chemical transformations relevant to understanding icy bodies in the Solar System and interstellar medium.
Contribution
It offers new spectroscopic data and insights into the chemical evolution of space-related ices under energetic processing, aiding interpretation of astronomical observations.
Findings
Ozone and N3 radicals form after electron irradiation.
Energetic processing produces nitrogen oxides and other molecules.
VUV spectra match observations of icy Saturn moons.
Abstract
Molecular oxygen, nitrogen, and ozone have been detected in the Solar System. They are also expected to be present in ice-grain mantles within star-forming regions. Laboratory experiments that simulate energetic processing (ions, photons, and electrons) of ices are essential for interpreting and directing future astronomical observations. We provide VUV photoabsorption spectroscopic data of energetically processed nitrogen- and oxygen-rich ices that will help to identify absorption bands and/or spectral slopes observed on icy objects in the Solar System and on ice-grain mantles of the interstellar medium. We present VUV photoabsorption spectra of frozen O2 and N2, a 1:1 mixture of both, and a new systematic set of pure and mixed nitrogen oxide ices. Spectra were obtained at 22 K before and after 1 keV electron bombardment of the ice sample. Ices were then annealed to higher temperatures…
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