Modelling methanol and hydride formation in the JWST Ice Age era
Izaskun Jim\'enez-Serra, Andr\'es Meg\'ias, Joseph Salaris, Herma, Cuppen, Ang\`ele Taillard, Miwha Jin, Valentine Wakelam, Anton I. Vasyunin,, Paola Caselli, Yvonne J. Pendleton, Emmanuel Dartois, Jennifer A. Noble,, Serena Viti, Katerina Borshcheva, Robin T. Garrod

TL;DR
This study models ice chemistry in the Chamaeleon I cloud using multiple astrochemical codes to understand methanol and hydride formation, revealing the importance of density, collapse time, and chemical processes at low temperatures.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of different astrochemical models to explain JWST ice observations and identifies key factors influencing ice composition in dense molecular clouds.
Findings
Methanol ice forms mainly via CO hydrogenation.
Reactions CH3+OH and C+H2O are negligible in methanol formation.
Differences in ice abundances are due to diffusive vs. non-diffusive chemistry at low temperatures.
Abstract
(Abridged) JWST observations have measured the ice composition toward two highly-extinguished field stars in the Chamaeleon I cloud. The observed extinction excess on the long-wavelength side of the H2O ice band at 3 micron has been attributed to a mixture of CH3OH with ammonia hydrates, which suggests that CH3OH ice could have formed in a water-rich environment with little CO depletion. Laboratory experiments and quantum chemical calculations suggest that CH3OH could form via the grain surface reactions CH3+OH and/or C+H2O in water-rich ices. However, no dedicated chemical modelling has been carried out thus far to test their efficiency and dependence on the astrochemical code employed. We model the ice chemistry in the Chamaeleon I cloud using a set of astrochemical codes (MAGICKAL, MONACO, Nautilus, UCLCHEM, and KMC simulations) to test the effects of the different code architectures…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Methane Hydrates and Related Phenomena · Geology and Paleoclimatology Research
