Chemical complexity of phosphorous bearing species in various regions of the Interstellar medium
Milan Sil, Satyam Srivastav, Bratati Bhat, Suman Kumar Mondal,, Prasanta Gorai, Rana Ghosh, Takashi Shimonishi, Sandip K. Chakrabarti,, Bhalamurugan Sivaraman, Amit Pathak, Naoki Nakatani, Kenji Furuya, and Ankan, Das

TL;DR
This study models the distribution and detectability of phosphorus-bearing molecules in various interstellar regions, revealing their chemical behavior, correlations with atomic nitrogen, and spectral features relevant for astronomical observations.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive chemical modeling of P-bearing species across different interstellar environments, including radiative transfer and quantum chemical analysis.
Findings
PO/PN ratio varies with environment, indicating different chemical regimes.
Predicted spectral lines and required observation times for ground and space telescopes.
Quantum chemical insights into infrared features of PH3 and impurities.
Abstract
Phosphorus related species are not known to be as omnipresent in space as hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur-bearing species. Astronomers spotted very few P-bearing molecules in the interstellar medium and circumstellar envelopes. Limited discovery of the P-bearing species imposes severe constraints in modeling the P-chemistry. In this paper, we carry out extensive chemical models to follow the fate of P-bearing species in diffuse clouds, photon-dominated or photodissociation regions (PDRs), and hot cores/corinos. We notice a curious correlation between the abundances of PO and PN and atomic nitrogen. Since N atoms are comparatively abundant in diffuse clouds and PDRs than in the hot core/corino region, PO/PN reflects < 1 in diffuse clouds, << 1 in PDRs, and > 1 in the late warm-up evolutionary phase of the hot core/corino regions. During the end of the post-warm-up phase,…
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