Resolved molecular line observations reveal an inherited molecular layer in the young disk around TMC1A
Daniel Harsono, Matthijs van der Wiel, Per Bjerkeli, Jon Ramsey,, Hannah Calcutt, Lars Kristensen, and Jes J{\o}rgensen

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA observations to analyze the molecular composition of the young TMC1A disk, revealing inherited molecular layers and chemical evolution insights relevant to planet formation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed molecular abundance structure of a young disk around TMC1A, highlighting inherited chemical features and their implications for disk evolution and planet formation.
Findings
Molecular abundances in the disk are similar to the protostellar envelope and older disks.
Bulk planet-forming material enters the disk unaltered from the envelope.
Differences in HCN and H2O abundances trace chemical evolution during disk formation.
Abstract
Physical processes that govern the star and planet formation sequence influence the chemical composition and evolution of protoplanetary disks. To understand the chemical composition of protoplanets, we need to constrain the composition and structure of the disks from whence they are formed. We aim to determine the molecular abundance structure of the young disk around the TMC1A protostar on au scales in order to understand its chemical structure and any possible implications for disk formation. We present spatially resolved Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array observations of CO, , HCN, DCN, and SO line emission, as well as dust continuum emission, in the vicinity of TMC1A. Molecular column densities are estimated both under the assumption of optically thin emission from molecules in LTE as well as through more detailed non-LTE radiative transfer calculations. Resolved…
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