Carbon-grain Sublimation: A New Top-down Component of Protostellar Chemistry
Abstract
Earth's carbon deficit has been an persistent problem in our understanding of the formation of our solar system. A possible solution would be the sublimation of carbon grains at the so-called soot line (~300 K) early in the planet-formation process. Here, we argue that the most likely signatures of this process are an excess of hydrocarbons and nitriles inside the soot line, and a higher excitation temperature for these molecules compared to oxygen-bearing complex organics that desorb around the water snowline (~100 K). Such characteristics have been reported in the literature, for example, in Orion KL, although not uniformly, potentially due to differences in the observational settings and analysis methods of different studies or the episodic nature of protostellar accretion. If this process is active, this would mean that there is a heretofore unknown component to the carbon chemistry during the protostellar phase that is acting from the top down—starting from the destruction of larger species—instead of from the bottom up from atoms. In the presence of such a top-down component, the origin of organic molecules needs to be re-explored.
Additional Information
© 2020 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2020 May 6; revised 2020 June 18; accepted 2020 June 20; published 2020 July 14. We would like to thank the referee and Ewine van Dishoeck for positive feedback that has improved this paper. M.L.R.H. acknowledges support from the Michigan Society of Fellows. E.A.B. acknowledges funding from NSF grant AST 1907653 and NASA grant XRP 80NSSC20K0259. J.K.J. acknowledges support by the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program through ERC Consolidator Grant "S4F" (grant agreement No. 646908). G.A.B. acknowledges support from the NASA XRP (NNX16AB48G) and Astrobiology (NNX15AT33A) programs.Attached Files
Published - van-t_Hoff_2020_ApJL_897_L38.pdf
Submitted - 2006-12522.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 104376
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20200714-101419102
- Michigan Society of Fellows
- NSF
- AST-1907653
- NASA
- 80NSSC20K0259
- European Research Council (ERC)
- 646908
- NASA
- NNX16AB48G
- NASA
- NNX15AT33A
- Created
-
2020-07-14Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
-
2023-10-02Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- Astronomy Department, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences (GPS)