CHEMISTRY IN A PROTOPLANETARY NEBULA


Autoria(s): Howe, D.A.; Millar, TJ; Williams, D.A.
Data(s)

1992

Resumo

In this paper we investigate gas-phase chemistry in the remnant 'superwind' of a carbon-rich red giant star, during its transition to a planetary nebula. The interacting stellar winds model is used. It is found that during the first few hundred years of transition, significant abundances of a few small molecules and ions (e.g. CH+, CH2+, CH3+, CH, CH2, NH) may occur in the thin, dense, shocked shell of gas predicted by thiS model, but that most molecules observed in protoplanetary nebulae will be rapidly destroyed, through photodissociation by strong UV from the central star. If dense clumps are present during transition, they may allow the gas-phase formation and/or survival of small amounts of some molecules, such as HCN, CN, C2H2, and HC3N, until about 2000 yr after termination of the superwind; and young, fully developed planetary nebulae may show observable amounts of polyatomic molecules by this means. Such clumping may explain the existence of, e.g., HCN in NGC 7027.

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/chemistry-in-a-protoplanetary-nebula(fdc1bd52-5aef-4467-89ff-8efdde029950).html

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Howe , D A , Millar , T J & Williams , D A 1992 , ' CHEMISTRY IN A PROTOPLANETARY NEBULA ' Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society , vol 255 , pp. 217-226 .

Tipo

article