Deuterium and $^{15}$N fractionation in N$_2$H$^+$ during the formation of a Sun-like star (1801.07539v1)
Abstract: Although chemical models predict that the deuterium fractionation in N$_2$H$+$ is a good evolutionary tracer in the star formation process, the fractionation of nitrogen is still a poorly understood process. Recent models have questioned the similar evolutionary trend expected for the two fractionation mechanisms in N$_2$H$+$, based on a classical scenario in which ion-neutral reactions occurring in cold gas should have caused an enhancement of the abundance of N$_2$D$+$, ${15}$NNH$+$, and N${15}$NH$+$. In the framework of the ASAI IRAM-30m large program, we have investigated the fractionation of deuterium and ${15}$N in N$_2$H$+$ in the best known representatives of the different evolutionary stages of the Sun-like star formation process. The goal is to ultimately confirm (or deny) the classical "ion-neutral reactions" scenario that predicts a similar trend for D and ${15}$N fractionation. We do not find any evolutionary trend of the ${14}$N/${15}$N ratio from both the ${15}$NNH$+$ and N${15}$NH$+$ isotopologues. Therefore, our findings confirm that, during the formation of a Sun-like star, the core evolution is irrelevant in the fractionation of ${15}$N. The independence of the ${14}$N/${15}$N ratio with time, found also in high-mass star-forming cores, indicates that the enrichment in ${15}$N revealed in comets and protoplanetary disks is unlikely to happen at core scales. Nevertheless, we have firmly confirmed the evolutionary trend expected for the H/D ratio, with the N$_2$H$+$/N$_2$D$+$ ratio decreasing before the pre-stellar core phase, and increasing monotonically during the protostellar phase. We have also confirmed clearly that the two fractionation mechanisms are not related.
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