日本地球惑星科学連合2014年大会

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口頭発表

セッション記号 P (宇宙惑星科学) » P-PS 惑星科学

[P-PS24_1PM2] 宇宙における物質の形成と進化

2014年5月1日(木) 16:15 〜 18:00 415 (4F)

コンビーナ:*橘 省吾(北海道大学大学院理学研究院自然史科学専攻地球惑星システム科学分野)、三浦 均(名古屋市立大学大学院システム自然科学研究科)、大坪 貴文(東北大学大学院理学研究科天文学専攻)、本田 充彦(神奈川大学理学部数理物理学科)、座長:橘 省吾(北海道大学大学院理学研究院自然史科学専攻地球惑星システム科学分野)

16:30 〜 16:45

[PPS24-09] 模擬氷星間塵への真空紫外光照射による有機分子生成実験

*羽馬 哲也1橘 省吾2ローレット ピアニ2遠藤 由希子2藤田 和之1中坪 俊一1福士 博樹1森 章一1千貝 健1香内 晃1 (1.北海道大学 低温科学研究所、2.北海道大学大学院理学研究院自然史科学専攻地球惑星システム科学分野)

キーワード:分子雲, 原始惑星系星雲, 氷星間塵, 有機物

Cosmic gases and dust grains ejected from dying stars gradually assemble under the influence of gravity to form interstellar clouds. Among these gases, heavy elements such as magnesium (Mg) and silicon (Si) are incorporated in dust. Lighter and chemically active elements (e.g., hydrogen, carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen; H, C, O, N, respectively) play important roles in the chemistry of interstellar clouds. After the temperature and photon field decrease when the density of dust particles increases in interstellar clouds, atoms (e.g., H, O, C, N) and molecules (e.g., CO) deposit onto the dust surfaces. Cold-surface reactions proceed on the grain surface, and an ice mantle, which is predominantly composed of H2O combined with other molecules such as CO, CO2, NH3, CH4, H2CO, and CH3OH, is formed.The ice mantles are also subjected to substantial energetic processing by the prevailing ultraviolet radiation during the lifetime of a interstellar cloud. Followed by repeated processing when cycling between diffused clouds and dense clouds, new refractory organic molecules are formed in the ice mantles. The ice mantles undergo further photon radiations upon the formation of protoplanetary disks, and finally evolve to non-volatile complex organic residues by irradiation and thermal processing. However, the detail of the chemical evolution of the organic molecules has still been ambiguous. Although the previous laboratory studies using infrared spectroscopy can provide the presence of polar compounds such as amines, carboxylic acid or amides functions, it often suffers from the low sensitivity and the difficulty to obtain precise identifications of molecular species due to the overlapping of broad solid-state bands. Since dust grains and ice mantles are the precursors of planetary material, studying the photoprocesses is essential to understanding the origin of our solar system, and more powerful analytical techniques are required to unveil rich chemistry of the ices in interstellar clouds and protoplanetary disks.Here, we are going to present a talk about a new apparatus which is now under construction to shed light on the chemical evolution of organic molecules in interstellar clouds and protoplanetary disks. The apparatus consists of three basic parts, i.e., a vacuum system, a copper-substrate equipped with a closed cycle helium refrigerator, and a vacuum ultraviolet source. Multi-component interstellar ice analogues are created on the cold (10 K) substrate by vapor deposition, and subjected to irradiation by the ultraviolet. The irradiated ice is subsequently heated up to 800 K. The gas composition desorbed from the ice during heating is analyzed by a high-resolution quadrupole mass spectrometer in the vacuum chamber. The survived organic residue from heating are studied using gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and high performance liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS).