A study of the $c$-$\mathrm{C_{3}HD}$/$c$-$\mathrm{C_{3}H_{2}}$ ratio in low-mass star forming regions
Abstract: We use the deuteration of $c$-$\mathrm{C_{3}H_{2}}$ to probe the physical parameters of starless and protostellar cores, related to their evolutionary states, and compare it to the $\mathrm{N_{2}H{+}}$-deuteration in order to study possible differences between the deuteration of C- and N-bearing species. We observed the main species $c$-$\mathrm{C_{3}H_{2}}$, the singly and doubly deuterated species $c$-$\mathrm{C_{3}HD}$ and $c$-$\mathrm{C_{3}D_{2}}$, as well as the isotopologue $c$-$\mathrm{{H{13}CC_{2}H}}$ toward 10 starless cores and 5 protostars in the Taurus and Perseus Complexes. We examined the correlation between the $N$($c$-$\mathrm{C_{3}HD}$)/$N$($c$-$\mathrm{C_{3}H_{2}}$) ratio and the dust temperature along with the $\mathrm{H_2}$ column density and the CO depletion factor. The resulting $N$($c$-$\mathrm{C_{3}HD}$)/$N$($c$-$\mathrm{C_{3}H_{2}}$) ratio is within the error bars consistent with $10\%$ in all starless cores with detected $c$-$\mathrm{C_{3}HD}$. This also accounts for the protostars except for the source HH211, where we measure a high deuteration level of $23\%$. The deuteration of $\mathrm{N_{2}H{+}}$ follows the same trend but is considerably higher in the dynamically evolved core L1544. Toward the protostellar cores the coolest objects show the largest deuterium fraction in $c$-$\mathrm{C_{3}H_{2}}$. We show that the deuteration of $c$-$\mathrm{C_{3}H_{2}}$ can trace the early phases of star formation and is comparable to that of $\mathrm{N_{2}H{+}}$. However, the largest $c$-$\mathrm{C_{3}H_{2}}$ deuteration level is found toward protostellar cores, suggesting that while $c$-$\mathrm{C_{3}H_{2}}$ is mainly frozen onto dust grains in the central regions of starless cores, active deuteration is taking place on ice.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.