Deuterium-enriched water ties planet-forming disks to comets and protostars
Journal article, 2023

Water is a fundamental molecule in the star and planet formation process, essential for catalysing the growth of solid material and the formation of planetesimals within disks1,2. However, the water snowline and the HDO:H2O ratio within proto-planetary disks have not been well characterized because water only sublimates at roughly 160 K (ref. 3), meaning that most water is frozen out onto dust grains and that the water snowline radii are less than 10 AU (astronomical units)4,5. The sun-like protostar V883 Ori (M* = 1.3 M⊙)6 is undergoing an accretion burst7, increasing its luminosity to roughly 200 L⊙ (ref. 8), and previous observations suggested that its water snowline is 40-120 AU in radius6,9,10. Here we report the direct detection of gas phase water (HDO and [Formula: see text]) from the disk of V883 Ori. We measure a midplane water snowline radius of approximately 80 AU, comparable to the scale of the Kuiper Belt, and detect water out to a radius of roughly 160 AU. We then measure the HDO:H2O ratio of the disk to be (2.26 ± 0.63) × 10-3. This ratio is comparable to those of protostellar envelopes and comets, and exceeds that of Earth's oceans by 3.1σ. We conclude that disks directly inherit water from the star-forming cloud and this water becomes incorporated into large icy bodies, such as comets, without substantial chemical alteration.

Author

J. J. Tobin

National Radio Astronomy Observatory

Merel L.R. van ’t Hoff

University of Michigan

Margot Leemker

Leiden University

Ewine F. van Dishoeck

Leiden University

Teresa Paneque-Carreño

Leiden University

European Southern Observatory (ESO)

Kenji Furuya

National Astronomical Observatory of Japan

D. Harsono

National Tsing Hua University

Magnus V. Persson

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Astronomy and Plasmaphysics

L. Ilsedore Cleeves

University of Virginia

Patrick D. Sheehan

Northwestern University

Lucas Cieza

Diego Portales University

Nature

0028-0836 (ISSN) 1476-4687 (eISSN)

Vol. 615 7951 227-230

Subject Categories

Physical Chemistry

Water Engineering

Geochemistry

DOI

10.1038/s41586-022-05676-z

PubMed

36890372

More information

Latest update

3/23/2023