FAUST XVII: Super deuteration in the planet forming system IRS 63 where the streamer strikes the disk
L. Podio, C. Ceccarelli, C. Codella, G. Sabatini, D. Segura-Cox, N., Balucani, A. Rimola, P. Ugliengo, C. J. Chandler, N. Sakai, B. Svoboda, J., Pineda, M. De Simone, E. Bianchi, P. Caselli, A. Isella, Y. Aikawa, M., Bouvier, E. Caux, L. Chahine, S. B. Charnley, N. Cuello

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of deuterated formaldehyde in a planet-forming disk, revealing how streamers influence disk chemistry and the inheritance of molecular material during early planet formation.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence of deuterated formaldehyde in a young disk and links streamer interactions to chemical composition and molecule formation pathways.
Findings
First detection of HDCO and D₂CO in a planet-forming disk.
D₂CO distribution is asymmetric, peaking where streamer impacts the disk.
D₂CO likely formed on grain mantles and released in shocks.
Abstract
Recent observations suggest that planets formation starts early, in protostellar disks of yrs, which are characterized by strong interactions with the environment, e.g., through accretion streamers and molecular outflows. To investigate the impact of such phenomena on disk physical and chemical properties it is key to understand what chemistry planets inherit from their natal environment. In the context of the ALMA Large Program Fifty AU STudy of the chemistry in the disk/envelope system of Solar-like protostars (FAUST), we present observations on scales from ~1500 au to ~60 au of HCO, HDCO, and DCO towards the young planet-forming disk IRS~63. HCO probes the gas in the disk as well as in a large scale streamer (~1500 au) impacting onto the South-East (SE) disk side. We detect for the first time deuterated formaldehyde, HDCO and DCO, in a planet-forming disk,…
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