A high HDO/H$_{2}$O ratio in the Class I protostar L1551 IRS5
Audrey Andreu (1), Audrey Coutens (1), Fernando Cruz-S\'aenz de Miera, (1,2,3), Nicolas Houry (1), Jes K. J{\o}rgensen (4), \'Agnes K\'osp\'al, (2,3,5,6), Daniel Harsono (7) ((1) Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et, Plan\'etologie (IRAP), Universit\'e de Toulouse, UT3-PS

TL;DR
This study measures the water deuterium fractionation in the Class I protostar L1551 IRS5, revealing a high HDO/H2O ratio similar to isolated Class 0 sources, which informs understanding of chemical evolution during star formation.
Contribution
First measurement of the HDO/H2O ratio in a Class I protostar, showing similarities with isolated Class 0 sources and implications for chemical evolution.
Findings
HDO/H2O ratio of (2.1 ± 0.8) × 10^{-3} in the redshifted component
Higher than in clustered Class 0 sources and comets
Suggests little water reprocessing from Class 0 to Class I stage
Abstract
Water is a very abundant molecule in star-forming regions. Its deuterium fractionation is an important tool for understanding its formation and evolution during the star and planet formation processes. While the HDO/HO ratio has been determined toward several Class 0 protostars and comets, the number of studies toward Class I protostars is limited. We aim to study the water deuteration toward the Class I binary protostar L1551 IRS5 and to investigate the effect of evolutionary stage and environment on variations in the water D/H ratio. Observations were made using the NOEMA interferometer. The HDO 3-2 transition at 225.9 GHz and the HO 3-2 transition at 203.4 GHz were covered with a spatial resolution of 0.5'' 0.8'', while the HDO 4-4 transition at 143.7 GHz was observed with a resolution of 2.0'' 2.5''. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMolecular Spectroscopy and Structure · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Spacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies
