We use spectra and maps of NH2D, ND2H, and ND3, obtained with the CSO, IRAM
30m and Arecibo telescopes, to study deuteration processes in dense cores. The
data include the first detection of the hyperfine structure of ND2H. The
emission of ND2H and ND3 does not seem to peak at the positions of the embedded
protostars, but instead at offset positions, where outflow interactions may
occur. A constant ammonia fractionation ratio in star-forming regions is
generally assumed to be consistent with an origin on dust grains. However, in
the pre-stellar cores studied here, the fractionation varies significantly when
going from NH3 to ND3. We present a steady state model of the gas-phase
chemistry for these sources, which includes passive depletion onto dust grains
and multiply saturated deuterated species up to five deuterium atoms (e.g.
CD5+). The observed column density ratios of all four ammonia isotopologues are
reproduced within a factor of 3 for a gas temperature of 10 K. We also predict
that deuterium fractionation remains significant at temperatures up to 20 K. ND
and NHD, which have rotational transitions in the submillimeter domain are
predicted to be abundant.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, 12 table