Ice chemistry that can be unveiled with the JWST: SynthIceSpec, a synthetic spectrum generator to test spectral limits. Solid CO_2 as a dust thermometer and solid CH_3CN detectability in cold cores

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Ice chemistry that can be unveiled with the JWST: SynthIceSpec, a synthetic spectrum generator to test spectral limits. Solid CO_2 as a dust thermometer and solid CH_3CN detectability in cold cores

Authors

A. Taillard, P. Gratier, J. A. Noble, E. Dartois, A. C. A. Boogert, J. Keane, A. Clement, A. Maiolo, A. Fuente, V. Wakelam

Abstract

As the (JWST) pursues its observing journey, several thousands of icy-grain spectra are expected to be measured and analysed. The inventory of ices in particular, via the observations of background sources, is accessible for hundreds of lines of sight (LOSs) per molecular-cloud region, opening the possibility to add strong constraints on the solid phase chemistry in a vast domain of cloud densities. SynthIceSpec is a synthetic infrared (IR) spectrum generator that has been designed as a tool to support observing proposals and to test the outcome of chemical models. It is based on laboratory measurements of pure and mixed ices, where each vibrational component is fitted by a sum of Gaussian profiles. Given an initial ice chemical composition (either set by the user or the outputs of a chemical model), a full JWST spectrum is generated, to which the contribution of silicates; continuum, stellar photospheric absorption bands; and extinction law can be added. For the continuum, stellar photospheric models for a wide range of spectral types can be selected by the program, or, Spectral Energy Distribution (SEDs). We present a few use cases of SynthIceSpec: we probed the impact of dust temperature on CO_2 ice formation using IR data and gas-grain modelling. Next, we used SynthIceSpec to explore the detectability of the main feature of CH_3CN at 4.45 um in a cold core environment with the JWST, which was previously tentatively detected in YSOs. The detection thresholds we derive are reasonably low and observable, but identification is directly impacted by the photosphere absorptions that can greatly hinder identification. For some photostellar types, it could remain feasible. Coupled with the Estimated Time Calculator of the Space Telescope Science Institute, SynthIceSpec can be used to find the optimum observational setup for new observations.

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