TL;DR
This study models water chemistry during star formation to explain observed differences in deuterium ratios between isolated and clustered protostars, highlighting the importance of initial cloud conditions.
Contribution
The paper introduces a 3D physicochemical model that links initial cloud conditions to water deuteration levels in protostars, explaining environmental differences.
Findings
Reproduces observed HDO/H2O and D2O/HDO ratios in hot corinos.
No correlation between water D/H ratios and cloud environment under identical conditions.
Differences in initial prestellar conditions account for protostellar water deuteration variations.
Abstract
Recent observations of the HDO/HO ratio toward protostars in isolated and clustered environments show an apparent dichotomy, where isolated sources show higher D/H ratios than clustered counterparts. Establishing which physical and chemical processes create this differentiation can provide insights into the chemical evolution of water during star formation and the chemical diversity during the star formation process and in young planetary systems. Methods: The evolution of water is modeled using 3D physicochemical models of a dynamic star-forming environment. The physical evolution during the protostellar collapse is described by tracer particles from a 3D MHD simulation of a molecular cloud region. Each particle trajectory is post-processed using RADMC-3D to calculate the temperature and radiation field. The chemical evolution is simulated using a three-phase grain-surface…
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