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Importance of source structure on complex organics emission. I. Observations of CH$_3$OH from low-mass to high-mass protostars (2202.04723v2)

Published 9 Feb 2022 in astro-ph.SR and astro-ph.GA

Abstract: Complex organic molecules (COMs) are often observed toward embedded Class 0 and I protostars. However, not all Class 0 and I protostars exhibit COMs emission. In this work, variations in methanol (CH$3$OH) emission are studied to test if absence of CH$_3$OH emission can be linked to source properties. Combining both new and archival observations with ALMA and sources from the literature, a sample of 184 low-mass and high-mass protostars is investigated. The warm (T > 100 K) gaseous CH$_3$OH mass, $M{\rm CH_3OH}$, is determined for each source using primarily optically thin isotopologues. On average, Class I protostellar systems seem to have less warm $M_{\rm CH_3OH}$ ($<10{-10}$ M$\odot$) than younger Class 0 sources ($\sim10{-7}$ M$\odot$). High-mass sources in our sample show higher warm $M_{\rm CH_3OH}$ up to $10{-7}-10{-3}$ M$\odot$. To take into account the effect of the source's overall mass on $M{\rm CH_3OH}$, a normalized CH$3$OH mass is defined as $M{\rm CH_3OH}/M_{\rm dust,0}$, where $M_{\rm dust,0}$ is the cold + warm dust mass within a fixed radius. Excluding upper limits, a simple power-law fit to the normalized warm CH$3$OH masses results in $M{\rm CH_3OH}/M_{\rm dust,0}\propto L_{\rm bol}{0.70\pm0.05}$. This is in good agreement with a simple hot core toy model which predicts that the normalized $M_{\rm CH_3OH}$ increases with $L_{\rm bol}{0.75}$ due to the snowline moving outward. Sources for which the size of the disk is equivalent or smaller than the estimated 100 K radius agree well with the best-fit power-law model, whereas sources with significantly larger disks show up to two orders of magnitude lower normalized warm CH$_3$OH masses. Based on the latter results, we suggest that source structure such as a disk can result in colder gas and thus fewer COMs in the gas phase. Additionally, optically thick dust can hide the emission of COMs.

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