An Interferometric View of H-MM1. I. Direct Observation of NH3 Depletion
Jaime E. Pineda, Jorma Harju, Paola Caselli, Olli Sipil\"a, Mika, Juvela, Charlotte Vastel, Erik Rosolowsky, Andreas Burkert, Rachel K., Friesen, Yancy Shirley, Mar\'ia Jos\'e Maureira, Spandan Choudhury, Dominique, M. Segura-Cox, Rolf G\"usten, Anna Punanova, Luca Bizzocchi

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ammonia observations to identify a density-dependent depletion of NH3 in a prestellar core, revealing a decrease in abundance at high densities consistent with grain surface adsorption.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed observational evidence of NH3 depletion at high densities in a prestellar core, supported by chemical modeling.
Findings
NH3 abundance decreases above a certain density threshold
Depletion follows a power law close to n^{-1}
Depletion is driven by adsorption onto grains
Abstract
Spectral lines of ammonia, NH, are useful probes of the physical conditions in dense molecular cloud cores. In addition to advantages in spectroscopy, ammonia has also been suggested to be resistant to freezing onto grain surfaces, which should make it a superior tool for studying the interior parts of cold, dense cores. Here we present high-resolution NH observations with the Very Large Array (VLA) and Green Bank Telescope (GBT) towards a prestellar core. These observations show an outer region with a fractional NH abundance of X(NH) = (1.9750.005) ( systematic), but it also reveals that after all, the X(NH) starts to decrease above a H column density of cm. We derive a density model for the core and find that the break-point in the fractional abundance occurs at the density n(H) $\sim…
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