Water and interstellar complex organics associated with the HH 212 protostellar disc - On disc atmospheres, disc winds, and accretion shocks

Abstract

The HH 212 protostellar system, in Orion B, has been mapped thanks to ALMA-Band 7 Cycle 1 and Cycle 4 observations of dueterated water (HDO) and acetaldehyde (CH3CHO) emission with an angular resolution down to 0.15 arcsec (60 au). Many emission lines due to 14 CH3CHO and 1 HDO transitions at high excitation (E u between 163 K and 335 K) have been imaged in the inner 70 au region. The local thermal equilibrium analysis of the CH3CHO emission leads to a temperature of 7814 K and a column density of 7.63.2 × 1015 cm-2, which, when N H2 of 1024 cm-2 is assumed, leads to an abundance of X CH3CHO 8 × 10-9. The large velocity gradient analysis of the HDO emission also places severe constraints on the volume density, n H2 ≥ 108 cm-3. The line profiles are 5--7 km s-1 wide, and CH3CHO and HDO both show a 2 km s-1 velocity gradient over a size of 70 au (blue-shifted emission towards the north-west and red-shifted emission towards the south-east) along the disc equatorial plane, in agreement with what was found so far using other molecular tracers. The kinematics of CH3CHO and HDO are consistent with the occurrence of a centrifugal barrier, that is, the infalling envelope-rotating disc ring, which is chemically enriched through low-velocity accretion shocks. The emission radius is 60 au, in good agreement with what was found before for another interstellar complex organic molecule such as NH2CHO. We support a vertical structure for the centrifugal barrier, suggesting the occurrence of two outflowing, expanding, and rotating rings above and below (of about 40-45 au) the optically thick equatorial disc plane. It is tempting to speculate that these rings could probe the basis of a wind launched from this region.

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