Lack of other molecules in CO-rich debris discs: is it primordial or secondary gas?
Grigorii V. Smirnov-Pinchukov, Attila Mo\'or, Dmitry A. Semenov,, P\'eter \'Abrah\'am, Thomas Henning, \'Agnes K\'osp\'al, A. Meredith Hughes,, Emmanuel di Folco

TL;DR
This study investigates whether the gas in CO-rich debris discs is primordial or secondary by analyzing molecular compositions and modeling their expected abundances, finding that other molecules are likely very scarce in these discs.
Contribution
The paper provides new millimeter observations and chemical modeling to assess the molecular composition of CO-rich debris discs, clarifying their gas origin.
Findings
Only CO isotopologues are detected in debris discs.
Molecules other than CO are expected to be very low in abundance.
Simulations show non-detections are consistent with low HCO+ emission.
Abstract
The nature of the gas in CO-rich debris discs remains poorly understood, as it could either be a remnant from the earlier Class II phase or of secondary origin, driven by the destruction of icy planetesimals. The aim of this paper was to elucidate the origin of the gas content in the debris discs via various simple molecules that are often detected in the less-evolved Class II discs. We present millimetre molecular line observations of nine circumstellar discs around A-type stars: four CO-rich debris discs (HD 21997, HD 121617, HD 131488, HD 131835) and five old Herbig Ae protoplanetary discs (HD 139614, HD 141569, HD 142666, HD 145718, HD 100453). The sources were observed with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Bands 5 and 6 with 1-2'' resolution. The Herbig Ae discs are detected in the CO isotopologues, CN, HCN, HCO, C2H, and CS lines. In contrast, only CO…
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