Singly- and doubly-deuterated formaldehyde in massive star-forming regions
S. Zahorecz, I. Jimenez-Serra, L. Testi, K. Immer, F. Fontani, P., Caselli, K. Wang, T. Onishi

TL;DR
This study investigates how the deuteration fraction of formaldehyde varies across different evolutionary stages of high-mass star-forming regions, finding it decreases as the regions evolve from pre-stellar to protostellar stages.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence that the deuteration fraction of formaldehyde decreases with star formation evolution, extending previous pilot results with more sources and high-resolution data.
Findings
Deuterated formaldehyde detected in protostellar and HII regions.
Deuteration fraction decreases by an order of magnitude from early to late stages.
No detection of deuterated formaldehyde in starless cores.
Abstract
Deuterated molecules are good tracers of the evolutionary stage of star-forming cores. During the star formation process, deuterated molecules are expected to be enhanced in cold, dense pre-stellar cores and to deplete after protostellar birth. In this paper we study the deuteration fraction of formaldehyde in high-mass star-forming cores at different evolutionary stages to investigate whether the deuteration fraction of formaldehyde can be used as an evolutionary tracer. Using the APEX SEPIA Band 5 receiver, we extended our pilot study of the =32 rotational lines of HDCO and DCO to eleven high-mass star-forming regions that host objects at different evolutionary stages. High-resolution follow-up observations of eight objects in ALMA Band 6 were performed to reveal the size of the HCO emission and to give an estimate of the deuteration fractions HDCO/HCO and…
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