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Vacuum-UV (VUV) photodesorption from water-rich ice mantles coating interstellar grains is known to play an important role in the gas-to-ice ratio in star- and planet-forming regions. Quantitative photodesorption yields from water ice are crucial for astrochemical models. We aim to provide the first quantitative photon-energy dependent photodesorption yields from water ice in the VUV. This information is important to understand the photodesorption mechanisms and to account for the variation of the yields under interstellar irradiation conditions. Experiments have been performed on the DESIRS beamline at the SOLEIL synchrotron, delivering tunable VUV light, using the SPICES (Surface Processes and ICES) set-up. Compact amorphous solid water ice (H$_2$O and D$_2$O) has been irradiated from 7 to 13.5 eV. Quantitative yields have been obtained by detection in the gas phase with mass-spectrometry for sample temperatures ranging from 15 K to 100 K. Photodesorption spectra of H$_2$O (D$_2$O), OH (OD), H$_2$ (D$_2$) and O$_2$ peak around 9-10 eV and decrease at higher energies. Average photodesorption yields of intact water at 15 K are 5 $times$ 10$^{-4}$ molecule/photon for H$_2$O and 5 $times$ 10$^{-5}$ molecule/photon for D$_2$O over the 7-13.5 eV range. The strong isotopic effect can be explained by a differential chemical recombination between OH (OD) and H (D) photofragments originating from lower kinetic energy available for the OH photofragments upon direct water photodissociation and/or possibly by an electronic relaxation process. It is expected to contribute to water fractionation during the building-up of the ice grain mantles in molecular clouds and to favor OH-poor chemical environment in comet-formation regions of protoplanetary disks. The yields of all the detected species except OH (OD) are enhanced above (70 $pm$10) K, suggesting an ice restructuration at this temperature.
Core-excitation of water ice releases many different molecules and ions in the gas phase. Studying these desorbed species and the underlying mechanisms can provide useful information on the effects of X-ray irradiation in ice. We report a detailed st
The ultraviolet (UV) photodissociation of amorphous water ice at different ice temperatures is investigated using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and analytical potentials. Previous MD calculations of UV photodissociation of amorphous and crystal
We investigated the behavior of H$_2$, main constituent of the gas phase in dense clouds, after collision with amorphous solid water (ASW) surfaces, one of the most abundant chemical species of interstellar ices. We developed a general framework to s
In the quest to understand the formation of the building blocks of life, amorphous solid water (ASW) is one of the most widely studied molecular systems. Indeed, ASW is ubiquitous in the cold interstellar medium (ISM), where ASW-coated dust grains pr
Ultraviolet photodesorption of molecules from icy interstellar grains can explain observations of cold gas in regions where thermal desorption is negligible. This non-thermal desorption mechanism should be especially important where UV fluxes are hig