446 research outputs found
Interstellar ices as witnesses of star formation: selective deuteration of water and organic molecules unveiled
Observations of star forming environments revealed that the abundances of
some deuterated interstellar molecules are markedly larger than the cosmic D/H
ratio of 10-5. Possible reasons for this pointed to grain surface chemistry.
How- ever, organic molecules and water, which are both ice constituents, do not
enjoy the same deuteration. For example, deuterated formaldehyde is very
abundant in comets and star forming regions, while deuterated water rarely is.
In this article, we explain this selective deuteration by following the
formation of ices (using the rate equation method) in translucent clouds, as
well as their evolu- tion as the cloud collapses to form a star. Ices start
with the deposition of gas phase CO and O onto dust grains. While reaction of
oxygen with atoms (H or D) or molecules (H2) yields H2O (HDO), CO only reacts
with atoms (H and D) to form H2CO (HDCO, D2CO). As a result, the deuteration of
formaldehyde is sensitive to the gas D/H ratio as the cloud undergoes
gravitational collapse, while the deuteration of water strongly depends on the
dust temperature at the time of ice formation. These results reproduce well the
deuterium fractionation of formaldehyde observed in comets and star forming
regions and can explain the wide spread of deuterium fractionation of water
observed in these environments.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Accepted in ApJ letter; Astrophysical Journal
LET26536R1 201
Water formation on bare grains: When the chemistry on dust impacts interstellar gas
Context. Water together with O2 are important gas phase ingredients to cool
dense gas in order to form stars. On dust grains, H2 O is an important
constituent of the icy mantle in which a complex chemistry is taking place, as
revealed by hot core observations. The formation of water can occur on dust
grain surfaces, and can impact gas phase composition. Aims. The formation of
molecules such as OH, H2 O, HO2, H2 O2, as well as their deuterated forms and
O2 and O3 is studied in order to assess how the chemistry varies in different
astrophysical environments, and how the gas phase is affected by grain surface
chemistry. Methods. We use Monte Carlo simulations to follow the formation of
molecules on bare grains as well as the fraction of molecules released into the
gas phase. We consider a surface reaction network, based on gas phase
reactions, as well as UV photo-dissociation of the chemical species. Results.
We show that grain surface chemistry has a strong impact on gas phase
chemistry, and that this chemistry is very different for different dust grain
temperatures. Low temperatures favor hydrogenation, while higher temperatures
favor oxygenation. Also, UV photons dissociate the molecules on the surface,
that can reform subsequently. The formation-destruction cycle increases the
amount of species released into the gas phase. We also determine the time
scales to form ices in diffuse and dense clouds, and show that ices are formed
only in shielded environments, as supported by observations.Comment: Accepted in A&
Design to reliability shielded vertical interconnection applied to microwave Chip Scale Packaging
This paper presents the electrical design, measurement and reliability ests of a shielded vertical interconnection dedicated to microwave solder-mount packages. Electromagnetic simulations show very good results up to 20 GHz. Test samples have been designed and manufactured. Electrical results are in accordance with the simulations with insertion loss lower than 0.1 dB up to 20 GHz for the proposed interconnection. Reliability tests of present no degradation of the after 500 thermal cycles in the [-55°C, +125°C] temperature range
The role of carbon grains in the deuteration of H2
Aims: The production of molecular hydrogen and its deuterated forms onto
carbonaceous dust grains is investigated in detail. The goal of this study is
to estimate the importance of the chemistry occuring on grain surfaces for the
deuteration of H2. Furthermore, we aim to find a robust and general surface
chemical model which can be used in different astrophysical environments.
Methods: Surface processes are described for the cases of graphitic and
amorphous--carbon grains, where laboratory work is available.
Langmuir--Hinshelwood as well as Eley--Rideal surface chemistries are included
in the model and their relative contributions are highlighted. Analytic
expressions are derived for H2, HD, and D2 formation efficiencies for both type
of grains. Rate equations are tested against stochastic methods. Results: As
expected, rate equations and stochastic methods diverge for grain sizes lower
than a critical value acrit. For grain sizes below this critical value, D2
formation decreases to favour HD formation. The formation efficiencies of H2
and D2 can be calculated by adding a correction factor to the rate equations
methods. We found that because of the presence of chemisorbed sites, which can
store atoms to form molecules up to high grain temperatures, the formation
efficiency of HD and D2 is very high compared to models where only
physisorption sites are taken into account. When considering a realistic
distribution of dust grains, we found that the formation rate of H2 and HD is
enhanced by an order of magnitude if small grains are taken into account. The
processes described in this paper, that allow a strong enhancement of the
deuterated forms of molecular hydrogen, could explain the high degree of
deuterium fractionation observed in protostellar environments.Comment: 17 pages 25 figure
Space-time evolution of electron cascades in diamond
Here we describe model calculations to follow the spatio-temporal evolution
of secondary electron cascades in diamond. The band structure of the insulator
has been explicitly incorporated into the calculations as it affects
ionizations from the valence band. A Monte-Carlo model was constructed to
describe the path of electrons following the impact of a single electron of
energy E 250 eV. The results show the evolution of the secondary electron
cascades in terms of the number of electrons liberated, the spatial
distribution of these electrons, and the energy distribution among the
electrons as a function of time. The predicted ionization rates (5-13 electrons
in 100 fs) lie within the limits given by experiments and phenomenological
models. Calculation of the local electron density and the corresponding Debye
length shows that the latter is systematically larger than the radius of the
electron cloud. This means that the electron gas generated does not represent a
plasma in a single impact cascade triggered by an electron of E 250 eV energy.
This is important as it justifies the independent-electron approximation used
in the model. At 1 fs, the (average) spatial distribution of secondary
electrons is anisotropic with the electron cloud elongated in the direction of
the primary impact. The maximal radius of the cascade is about 50 A at this
time. As the system cools, energy is distributed more equally, and the spatial
distribution of the electron cloud becomes isotropic. At 90 fs maximal radius
is about 150 A. The Monte-Carlo model described here could be adopted for the
investigation of radiation damage in other insulators and has implications for
planned experiments with intense femtosecond X-ray sources.Comment: 26 pages, latex, 13 figure
Porosity measurements of interstellar ice mixtures using optical laser interference and extended effective medium approximations
Aims. This article aims to provide an alternative method of measuring the
porosity of multi-phase composite ices from their refractive indices and of
characterising how the abundance of a premixed contaminant (e.g., CO2) affects
the porosity of water-rich ice mixtures during omni-directional deposition.
Methods. We combine optical laser interference and extended effective medium
approximations (EMAs) to measure the porosity of three astrophysically relevant
ice mixtures: H2O:CO2=10:1, 4:1, and 2:1. Infrared spectroscopy is used as a
benchmarking test of this new laboratory-based method. Results. By
independently monitoring the O-H dangling modes of the different water-rich ice
mixtures, we confirm the porosities predicted by the extended EMAs. We also
demonstrate that CO2 premixed with water in the gas phase does not
significantly affect the ice morphology during omni-directional deposition, as
long as the physical conditions favourable to segregation are not reached. We
propose a mechanism in which CO2 molecules diffuse on the surface of the
growing ice sample prior to being incorporated into the bulk and then fill the
pores partly or completely, depending on the relative abundance and the growth
temperature.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in A&
Near-arcsecond resolution observations of the hot corino of the solar type protostar IRAS 16293-2422
Complex organic molecules have previously been discovered in solar type
protostars, raising the questions of where and how they form in the envelope.
Possible formation mechanisms include grain mantle evaporation, interaction of
the outflow with its surroundings or the impact of UV/X-rays inside the
cavities. In this Letter we present the first interferometric observations of
two complex molecules, CH3CN and HCOOCH3, towards the solar type protostar
IRAS16293-2422. The images show that the emission originates from two compact
regions centered on the two components of the binary system. We discuss how
these results favor the grain mantle evaporation scenario and we investigate
the implications of these observations for the chemical composition and
physical and dynamical state of the two components.Comment: 5 pages (apjemulate), 2 figures; accepted by ApJ
Parameterizing the interstellar dust temperature
The temperature of interstellar dust particles is of great importance to
astronomers. It plays a crucial role in the thermodynamics of interstellar
clouds, because of the gas-dust collisional coupling. It is also a key
parameter in astrochemical studies that governs the rate at which molecules
form on dust. In 3D (magneto)hydrodynamic simulations often a simple expression
for the dust temperature is adopted, because of computational constraints,
while astrochemical modelers tend to keep the dust temperature constant over a
large range of parameter space. Our aim is to provide an easy-to-use parametric
expression for the dust temperature as a function of visual extinction () and to shed light on the critical dependencies of the dust temperature on
the grain composition. We obtain an expression for the dust temperature by
semi-analytically solving the dust thermal balance for different types of
grains and compare to a collection of recent observational measurements. We
also explore the effect of ices on the dust temperature. Our results show that
a mixed carbonaceous-silicate type dust with a high carbon volume fraction
matches the observations best. We find that ice formation allows the dust to be
warmer by up to 15% at high optical depths ( mag) in the
interstellar medium. Our parametric expression for the dust temperature is
presented as , where is in units of the Draine (1978) UV fieldComment: 16 pages, 17 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A.
Version 2: the omission of factor 0.921 in equation 4 is correcte
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