Astrochemistry and compositions of planetary systems
Karin I. Oberg, Edwin A. Bergin

TL;DR
This review summarizes current knowledge on the chemical processes in star-forming environments and protoplanetary disks that influence planetary compositions, highlighting recent discoveries and remaining uncertainties.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of chemical processes in star and disk environments, integrating recent observational, laboratory, and theoretical findings.
Findings
Chemical compositions of disks influence planetary habitability.
Inheritance and in situ processes shape disk chemistry.
Recent advances have improved understanding of planet-forming environments.
Abstract
Planets form and obtain their compositions in disks of gas and dust around young stars. The chemical compositions of these planet-forming disks regulate all aspects of planetary compositions from bulk elemental inventories to access to water and reactive organics, i.e. a planet's hospitality to life and its chemical origins. Disk chemical structures are in their turn governed by a combination of {\it in situ} chemical processes, and inheritance of molecules from the preceding evolutionary stages of the star formation process. In this review we present our current understanding of the chemical processes active in pre- and protostellar environments that set the initial conditions for disks, and the disk chemical processes that evolve the chemical conditions during the first million years of planet formation. We review recent observational, laboratory and theoretical discoveries that have…
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