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Promotionskolloquium |
Ivalu Barlach Christensen
| SCHEDULED |
MPIfR
The physical state of the interstellar medium (ISM) is essential for
understanding the intricate processes involved in massive star
formation
within galaxies. The nearby (d about 1.5 kpc) molecular cloud,
Cygnus-X,
harbors multiples sites of high-mass star-formation, allowing us to
probe the various stages as stars form and how the chemistry evolve.
Within the Cygnus Allscale Survey of Chemistry and Dynamical
Environments (CASCADE), we aim to explore the large-scale distribution
of deuterated molecules in Cygnus-X.
A plethora of star-forming clumps are observed with the CASCADE survey,
where clumps are believed to evolve from quiescent infrared-dark clouds
to high-mass protostellar objects to hot molecular cores to
ultra-compact HII regions. The most active and dense region within
Cygnus-X is the DR21 filament, harboring the prominent Hii region DR21
Main with the most intense outflow of the Milky Way. The degree of
deuteration, R, can significantly enhance over the elemental D/H-ratio
(10^−) depending on physical parameters such as temperature, density,
and ionization fraction. Deuterated molecules and their molecular
D/H-ratios are important diagnostic tools to study the physical
conditions of star-forming regions. This thesis focuses on probing the
deuterated fractions of Cygnus-X. Along the DR21 filament, the
deuterated fraction of DCO+, DNC, and DCN exhibit morphological
variations, caused by the local physical conditions. Active
star-formation along the filamentary structure initiate shock chemistry
in these high density region, destroying DCO+, and consequently
decreasing R(DCO+). Furthermore, the lower density regions are exposed
to FUV, in which the formation of HCO+ is halted, consequently
increasing the R(DCO+). Finally, to further understand how deuterated
fractions behave as clumps evolve, we investigate 67 clumps. Utilizing
CASCADE observation of the ubiquitous H2CO complemented with higher
J-transitions with the APEX telescope, we determine the physical
conditions of 67 clumps in Cygnus-X. The methodology of determining the
H2 volume density is efficient in probing the bulk of the gas within
0.2
pc of the clumps. With the physical conditions constrained, we model
the
chemical evolution of these clumps utilizing the plethora of molecules
covered with CASCADE, including the 6 deuterated fractions. We find
that
the two deuterated fractions decrease and increase, respectively, as
the
clumps evolve and become hotter.