4.6 Article

Molecular freeze-out as a tracer of the thermal and dynamical evolution of pre- and protostellar cores

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 435, Issue 1, Pages 177-182

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20042092

Keywords

stars : formation; ISM : molecules; ISM : abundances

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Radiative transfer models of multi-transition observations are used to determine molecular abundances as functions of position in pre- and protostellar cores. The data require a drop abundance profile with radius, with high abundances in the outermost regions probed by low excitation 3 mm lines, and much lower abundances at intermediate zones probed by higher frequency lines. The results are illustrated by detailed analysis of CO and HCO+ lines for a subset of objects. We propose a scenario in which the molecules are frozen out in a region of the envelope where the temperature is low enough (less than or similar to 40 K) to prevent immediate desorption, but where the density is high enough (> 10(4) - 10(5) cm(-3)) that the freeze-out timescales are shorter than the lifetime of the core. The size of the freeze-out zone is thereby a record of the thermal and dynamical evolution of the cores. Fits to CO data for a sample of 16 objects indicate that the size of the freeze-out zone decreases significantly between class 0 and I objects, explaining the variations in, for example, CO abundances with envelope masses. However, the corresponding timescales are 10(5 +/- 0.5) years, with no significant difference between class 0 and I objects. These timescales suggest that the dense pre- stellar phase with heavy depletions lasts only a short time, of the order of 10(5) yr, in agreement with recent chemical-dynamical models.

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