Stars like our Sun are formed in large, tenuous clouds of gas and dust. As the star is formed at the centre, the remaining material collapses into a thick disk around it. The chemical composition... Show moreStars like our Sun are formed in large, tenuous clouds of gas and dust. As the star is formed at the centre, the remaining material collapses into a thick disk around it. The chemical composition of such a cloud changes dramatically during this process. Spherical models have always been used to model this chemical evolution, but they cannot properly describe the disk. This thesis presents the first model that follows the entire chemical evolution from a pre-stellar core to a circumstellar disk in two spatial dimensions. It follows material as it falls in from the cloud to the star and disk. The density, temperature and UV flux along these trajectories serve as input for a gas-phase chemical network -- including freeze-out onto and evaporation from cold dust grains. The model offers new insights into the chemical history of disks, in particular of the region where planets and comets are formed. Applications of the model include the gas/ice ratios of carbon monoxide and water (Chapter 2), the abundances of key gas-phase molecules (Chapter 3), the crystallinity of the dust (Chapter 4), the isotope-specific photodissociation of carbon monoxide (Chapter 5) and the charge balance of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs; Chapter 6). Show less
The formation of snow and ice has always intrigued humans and challenged them to study these phenomena. Every snowflake has its own unique history of formation, but no two are alike. Like snow... Show moreThe formation of snow and ice has always intrigued humans and challenged them to study these phenomena. Every snowflake has its own unique history of formation, but no two are alike. Like snow-crystals, interstellar ices consist predominantly of water (H2O), but also contain significant fractions of other molecules such as carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO2), and methanol (CH3OH), and traces of dinitrogen (N2) and ammonia (NH3). The presence, or absence, of a molecule in the ice strongly depends on the environmental conditions. Vice versa, these molecules have an influence on their environment as well. Hence, the chemical composition and the structure of interstellar ices are thought to contain valuable information about the past and the future of interstellar regions, and it is for this reason that interstellar ices are simulated and studied under laboratory conditions. The present thesis contains a study of laboratory analogs of interstellar ices and presents a newly developed apparatus that provides a novel laboratory route to investigate the properties of these ices in more detail than has previously been possible. Show less