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JWST-IPA: Chemical Inventory and Spatial Mapping of Ices in the Protostar HOPS370 -- Evidence for an Opacity Hole and Thermal Processing of Ices

Authors :
Tyagi, Himanshu
P., Manoj
Narang, Mayank
Megeath, S T.
Rocha, Will Robson M.
Brunken, Nashanty
Rubinstein, Adam E.
Gutermuth, Robert A.
Evans, Neal J.
van Dishoeck, Ewine
Federman, Sam
Watson, Dan M.
Neufeld, David A.
Anglada, Guillem
Beuther, Henrik
Garatti, Alessio Caratti o
Looney, Leslie W.
Nazari, Pooneh
Osorio, Mayra
Stanke, Thomas
Yang, Yao-Lun
Bourke, Tyler L.
Fischer, William J.
Furlan, Elise
Green, Joel D.
Habel, Nolan
Klaassen, Pamela
Karnath, Nicole
Linz, Hendrik
Muzzerolle, James
Tobin, John J.
Atnagulov, Prabhani
Rahatgaonkar, Rohan
Sheehan, Patrick D.
Slavicinska, Katerina
Stutz, Amelia M.
Tychoniec, Łukasz
Wolk, Scott J.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The composition of protoplanetary disks, and hence the initial conditions of planet formation, may be strongly influenced by the infall and thermal processing of material during the protostellar phase. Composition of dust and ice in protostellar envelopes, shaped by energetic processes driven by the protostar, serves as the fundamental building material for planets and complex organic molecules. As part of the JWST GO program, "Investigating Protostellar Accretion" (IPA), we observed an intermediate-mass protostar HOPS 370 (OMC2-FIR3) using NIRSpec/IFU and MIRI/MRS. This study presents the gas and ice phase chemical inventory revealed with the JWST in the spectral range of $\sim$2.9 to 28 $\mu$m and explores the spatial variation of volatile ice species in the protostellar envelope. We find evidence for thermal processing of ice species throughout the inner envelope. We present the first high-spatial resolution ($\sim 80$ au) maps of key volatile ice species H$_{2}$O, CO$_{2}$, $^{13}$CO$_2$, CO, and OCN$^-$, which reveal a highly structured and inhomogeneous density distribution of the protostellar envelope, with a deficiency of ice column density that coincides with the jet/outflow shocked knots. Further, we observe high relative crystallinity of H$_{2}$O ice around the shocked knot seen in the H$_2$ and OH wind/outflow, which can be explained by a lack of outer colder material in the envelope along the line of sight due to the irregular structure of the envelope. These observations show clear evidence of thermal processing of the ices in the inner envelope, close to the outflow cavity walls, heated by the luminous protostar.<br />Comment: Submitted to ApJ. Main text:16 pages with 11 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2410.06697
Document Type :
Working Paper