Extraterrestrial Photochemistry: Principles and Applications
Christopher R. Arumainayagam, Eric Herbst, A.N. Heays, Ella Mullikin,, Megan Farrah, Michael G. Mavros

TL;DR
This paper reviews the principles of extraterrestrial photochemistry, emphasizing its role in synthesizing prebiotic molecules in space, and discusses experimental challenges and current understanding of these complex processes.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive evaluation of current knowledge on extraterrestrial photochemistry and its mechanisms in prebiotic molecule formation, highlighting experimental limitations.
Findings
Photochemistry initiates key prebiotic synthesis in space environments.
Approximately half of cosmic-ray photons induce photochemistry in interstellar ices.
Condensed-phase photochemistry involves complex processes like exciton and exciplex formation.
Abstract
Energetic processing of interstellar ice mantles and planetary atmospheres via photochemistry is a critical mechanism in the extraterrestrial synthesis of prebiotic molecules. Photochemistry is defined as chemical processes initiated by photon-induced electronic excitation, not involving ionization. In contrast, photons with energies above the ionization threshold initiate radiation chemistry (radiolysis). Vacuum-ultraviolet (6.2-12.4 eV) light may initiate photochemistry and radiation chemistry because the threshold for producing secondary electrons is lower in the condensed phase than in the gas phase. Approximately half of cosmic-ray induced photons incident on interstellar ices in star-forming regions initiate photochemistry while the rest initiate radiation chemistry. While experimental techniques such as velocity map imaging may be used to extract exquisite details about gas-phase…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
