Modeling snowline locations in protostars: The impact of the structure of protostellar cloud cores
Nadia M. Murillo, Tien-Hao Hsieh, and Catherine Walsh

TL;DR
This study models the locations of snowlines in protostars, revealing their dependence on physical parameters like luminosity and cloud density, and identifies molecular tracers for observational measurement.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive numerical model showing snowline positions are influenced by multiple physical factors, challenging the assumption of a fixed temperature for snowlines.
Findings
Snowline locations vary with luminosity and cloud density.
Inclination and resolution impact snowline observability.
N$_2$H$^+$ and HCO$^+$ are effective tracers for CO and H$_2$O snowlines.
Abstract
Abridged Context: Snowlines during star and disk formation are responsible for a range of effects during the evolution of protostars, such as setting the chemical composition of the envelope and disk. This in turn influences the formation of planets by changing the elemental compositions of solids and affecting the collisional properties and outcomes of dust grains. Snowlines can also reveal accretion bursts, providing insight into the formation process of stars. Methods: A numerical chemical network coupled with a grid of cylindrical-symmetric physical models was used to identify what physical parameters alter the CO and HO snowline locations. The investigated parameters are the initial molecular abundances, binding energies of CO and HO, heating source, cloud core density, outflow cavity opening angle, and disk geometry. Simulated molecular line emission maps were used to…
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