Title: The Chemistry of Stellar and Planetary
1 The Chemistry of Stellar and Planetary Formation
Eric Herbst Departments of Physics, Astronomy,
and Chemistry The Ohio State University
2The Center of the Milky Way
3 100,000 lt yr
Andromeda a nearby spiral galaxy
4The Eagle Nebula active star forming region in
our galaxy
5The Horsehead Nebula (also in our galaxy Orion)
6Dense Interstellar Cold Core
10 K
10(4) cm-3
H2 dominant
sites of star formation
0.5 lt yr
500 lt yr away
7Extinction consistent with size distribution
from 5-250 nm. Dust constitutes 1 of mass in a
cloud. IR spectral studies yield
information about cores of dust
particles (silicates, carbon) as well as icy
mantles
8Dominant Mantle Species water, CO2, CO, CH3OH
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10Work-horse method for gas-phase molecules
11Must compare with results of laboratory spectra
12The soon-to-be Herschel Space Observatory
13Cold Core
Low-mass Star Formation
adiabatic collapse
Protostar
T 10 K
n 104 cm-3
Molecule factory
Star Disk
hot core
100 K
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15Via high-resolution gas-phase analytical
spectroscopy
- 133 neutral molecules (February 2008)
- 18 molecular ions (main isotopes)
- 14 positive
- 4 negative
- H
- C, N, O
- S, Si, P, K, Na, Mg, Al, F
Most in our own galaxy only.
16Gaseous interstellar molecules (151)
17The Chemistry of Cold Cores
- Do chemical reactions take place under low
density and low temperature conditions? - Collision interval 1 day to 1 millenium k(T)
A(T)exp(-Ea/RT) - How can we convert atoms into molecules?
- H H ? H H
18Cosmic rays produce ions
19T 10-20 K
Gould Salpeter
20FORMATION OF GASEOUS WATER IN COLD CORES
H2 COSMIC RAYS ? H2 e
H2 H2 ? H3 H H3 O ? OH
H2 OHn H2 ? OHn1 H H3O e ?
H2O H OH 2H, etc
longer pathways to unsaturated organic species
21Formation of Ices In Cold Cores
H
O
OH
H
H2O
Other ices formed methane, ammonia, CO, CO2,
formaldehyde, methanol (all confirmed by
experiments at low temperature.)
22What is a model?
- Simulates chemistry in the gas and on surfaces
- 6000 gas-phase reactions 200 surface reactions
- Physical conditions can be homogeneous and
time-independent, or can be heterogeneous and/or
time dependent - Molecular concentrations can be calculated.
Comparison with observation yields physical
conditions and history of object. - Cold cores (gas ices) fit best at age of 105 yr
(80 of molecules fit to within observational
error). - Can even simulate what ices look like!
23Development of ice mantle in cold interstellar
core
Cuppen Herbst, 2007
24Hot Core Chemistry
100-300 K
evaporation
Saturated organic molecules such as ethers,
alcohols
10 K
Surface chemistry involving heavy radicals
(photochem-istry)
Cold phase accretion surface chemistry (H-rich)
Garrod Herbst (2006)
25ORGANIC MOLECULES PREDICTED IN HOT CORES
- Dimethyl ether, methyl formate, formic acid,
glycolaldehyde, acetic acid, ethanol,
acetaldehyde, ketene, acetone, ethylene glycol - Methyl amine, urea, formamide, acetamide,
methoxyamine, hydroxymethylamine - Garrod, Widicus Weaver, Herbst (2008)
26Protoplanetary Disk
Cosmic rays
UV
X-ray
midplane
UV
500 AU
0.01-0.1 M0
T Tauri star 106 yr old
Keplerian rotation
27ALMA the future.
http//www.physics.ohio-state.edu/eric/
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29Vertical Distribution
109 cm-3 108 107 106 105
R 105 AU
densiy cm-3
photodissociation
0 20 40 60 80 100
Z(AU)
accretion
Too detailed for observers
Icy Layer
Molecular Layer
PDR
30HOT CORE IN ORION
Molecular inventory contains gaseous saturated
(H-rich) normal molecules, not detected in
colder regions. Ice mantles no longer exist.
31Negative Ions in Clouds
- Herbst (1982) considered the possible abundance
of anions in cold regions of the ISM based on
radiative attachment mechanism - A e ? A- hn
- and estimated their maximum abundance to be 1 of
the neutral counterparts.
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