Water deuterium fractionation in the high-mass star-forming region G34.26+0.15 based on Herschel/HIFI data
Persson, C. M.; Lis, D. C.; Caux, E.; Goldsmith, P. F.; Herbst, E.; van der Tak, F. F. S.; Vastel, C.; Coutens, A.; Chavarría, L.; Gérin, M.; Hincelin, U.
Denmark, France, United States, Chile, Netherlands, Sweden
Abstract
Understanding water deuterium fractionation is important for constraining the mechanisms of water formation in interstellar clouds. Observations of HDO and H_2^{18}O transitions were carried out towards the high-mass star-forming region G34.26+0.15 with the Heterodyne Instrument for the Far-Infrared (HIFI) instrument onboard the Herschel Space Observatory, as well as with ground-based single-dish telescopes. 10 HDO lines and three H_2^{18}O lines covering a broad range of upper energy levels (22-204 K) were detected. We used a non-local thermal equilibrium 1D analysis to determine the HDO/H2O ratio as a function of radius in the envelope. Models with different water abundance distributions were considered in order to reproduce the observed line profiles. The HDO/H2O ratio is found to be lower in the hot core (∼3.5 × 10-4-7.5 × 10-4) than in the colder envelope (∼1.0 × 10-3-2.2 × 10-3). This is the first time that a radial variation of the HDO/H2O ratio has been found to occur in a high-mass source. The chemical evolution of this source was modelled as a function of its radius and the observations are relatively well reproduced. The comparison between the chemical model and the observations leads to an age of ∼105 yr after the infrared dark cloud stage.