CO and N2 Produced from H2O, CO2, and NH3 Cometary Ice Analogs
Alexandra McKinnon, Alexia Simon, Michelle R. Brann, Elettra L. Piacentino, Karin I. Oberg, Mahesh Rajappan

TL;DR
This study investigates the formation of CO and N2 in cometary ices through UV irradiation and electron bombardment, suggesting N2 mainly results from NH3 photodissociation, while CO indicates low-temperature entrapment.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence linking cometary hypervolatiles to photodissociation processes and compares these results to observed comet compositions.
Findings
N2 in comets can be explained by NH3 photodissociation.
CO abundances in comets likely result from low-temperature entrapment.
Photodissociation accounts for most observed N2 in comets.
Abstract
Hypervolatile species such as carbon monoxide (CO) and molecular nitrogen (N2) have been detected in comets, and could be used to constrain comet formation temperature conditions if their presence is due to freeze-out and/or entrapment. Here we instead explore another plausible origin of cometary hypervolatiles: photodissociation of less volatile species. We characterize CO and N2 formation following ultraviolet (UV) irradiation and electron bombardment of carbon dioxide (CO2), ammonia (NH3), H2O:CO2, H2O:NH3, and H2O:CO2:NH3 cometary ice analogs. We find that CO and N2 form in all photoprocessed ices at temperatures between 10 K and 100 K, resulting in 0.4-0.9 % CO and 0.03-0.7 % N2 relative to water, and CO/CO2 and N2/NH3 mixing ratios of 2.5-62 % and 0.7-9 %, respectively, across the experiments. Because our initial ices are reasonably well-matched to interstellar ices and we use UV…
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