119 research outputs found
Qualitative observation of reversible phase change in astrochemical ethanethiol ices using infrared spectroscopy
Here we report the first evidence for a reversible phase change in an ethanethiol ice prepared under astrochemical conditions. InfraRed (IR) spectroscopy was used to monitor the morphology of the ice using the Ssingle bondH stretching vibration, a characteristic vibration of thiol molecules. The deposited sample was able to switch between amorphous and crystalline phases repeatedly under temperature cycles between 10 K and 130 K with subsequent loss of molecules in every phase change. Such an effect is dependent upon the original thickness of the ice. Further work on quantitative analysis is to be carried out in due course whereas here we are reporting the first results obtained
Chemical evolution of some selected complex organic molecules in low-mass star-forming regions
The destiny of complex organic molecules (COMs) in star-forming regions is
interlinked with various evolutionary phases. Therefore, identifying these
species in diversified environments of identical star-forming regions would
help to comprehend their physical and chemical heritage. We identified multiple
COMs utilizing the Large Program `Astrochemical Surveys At IRAM' (ASAI) data,
dedicated to chemical surveys in Sun-like star-forming regions with the IRAM 30
m telescope. It was an unbiased survey in the millimetre regime, covering the
prestellar core, protostar, outflow region, and protoplanetary disk phase.
Here, we have reported some transitions of seven COMs, namely, methanol
(CH3OH), acetaldehyde (CH3CHO), methyl formate (CH3OCHO), ethanol (C2H5OH),
propynal (HCCCHO), dimethyl ether (CH3OCH3), and methyl cyanide (CH3CN) in some
sources L1544, B1-b, IRAS4A, and SVS13A. We found a trend among these species
from the derived abundances using the rotational diagram method and MCMC fit.
We have found that the abundances of all of the COMs, except for HCCCHO,
increase from the L1544 (prestellar core) and peaks at IRAS16293-2422 (class 0
phase). It is noticed that the abundance of these molecules correlate with the
luminosity of the sources. The obtained trend is also visible from the previous
interferometric observations and considering the beam dilution effect.Comment: 44 pages, 25 figures, and 12 tables. Accepted for the publication in
the Astrophysical Journa
Deuterium fractionation across the infrared-dark cloud G034.77−00.55 interacting with the supernova remnant W44
Context. Supernova remnants (SNRs) may regulate star formation in galaxies. For example, SNR-driven shocks may form new molecular gas or compress pre-existing clouds and trigger the formation of new stars. /
Aims. To test this scenario, we measured the deuteration of N2H+, DfracN2H+ – a well-studied tracer of pre-stellar cores – across the infrared-dark cloud (IRDC) G034.77-00.55, which is known to be experiencing a shock interaction with the SNR W44. /
Methods. We use N2H+ and N2D+J = 1−0 single pointing observations obtained with the 30m antenna at the Instituto de Radioas-tronomia Millimetrica to infer DfracN2H+ towards five positions across the cloud, namely a massive core, different regions across the shock front, a dense clump, an+d ambient gas. /
Results. We find DfracN2H+ in the range 0.03−0.1, which is several orders of magnitude larger than the cosmic D/H ratio (~10−5). The DfracN2H+ across the shock front is enhanced by more than a factor of 2 (DfracN2H+ ~ 0.05 - 0.07) with respect to the ambient gas (≤0.03) and simila+r to that measured generally in pre-stellar cores. Indeed, in the massive core and dense clump regions of this IRDC we measure DfracN2H+ ~ 0.01. /
Conclusions. We find enhanced deuteration of N2H+ across the region of the shock, that is, at a level that is enhanced with respect to regions of unperturbed gas. It is possible that this has been induced by shock compression, which would then be indirect evidence that the shock is triggering conditions for future star formation. However, since unperturbed dense regions also show elevated levels of deuteration, further, higher-resolution studies are needed to better understand the structure and kinematics of the deuterated material in the shock region; for example, to decipher whether it is still in a relatively diffuse form or is already organised in a population of low-mass pre-stellar cores
Astrochemical Diagnostics of the Isolated Massive Protostar G28.20-0.05
We study the astrochemical diagnostics of the isolated massive protostar G28.20-0.05. We analyze data from Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array 1.3 mm observations with a resolution of 0.″2 (∼1000 au). We detect emission from a wealth of species, including oxygen-bearing (e.g., HCO, CHOH, CHOCH), sulfur-bearing (SO, HS), and nitrogen-bearing (e.g., HNCO, NHCHO, CHCN, CHCN) molecules. We discuss their spatial distributions, physical conditions, correlation between different species, and possible chemical origins. In the central region near the protostar, we identify three hot molecular cores (HMCs). HMC1 is part of a millimeter continuum ring-like structure, is closest in projection to the protostar, has the highest temperature of ∼300 K, and shows the most line-rich spectra. HMC2 is on the other side of the ring, has a temperature of ∼250 K, and is of intermediate chemical complexity. HMC3 is further away, ∼3000 au in projection, cooler (∼70 K), and is the least line-rich. The three HMCs have similar mass surface densities (∼10 g cm), number densities (n ∼ 10 cm), and masses of a few solar masses. The total gas mass in the cores and in the region out to 3000 au is ∼25 M , which is comparable to that of the central protostar. Based on spatial distributions of peak line intensities as a function of excitation energy, we infer that the HMCs are externally heated by the protostar. We estimate column densities and abundances of the detected species and discuss the implications for hot core astrochemistry. © 2024. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society. © 2024. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.This paper makes use of the following ALMA data: ADS/JAO.ALMA#2016.1.00125.S. ALMA is a partnership of ESO (representing its member states), NSF (USA), and NINS (Japan), together with NRC (Canada), MOST and ASIAA (Taiwan), and KASI (Republic of Korea), in cooperation with the Republic of Chile. The Joint ALMA Observatory is operated by ESO, AUI/NRAO and NAOJ. P.G. acknowledges support from a Chalmers Initiative on Cosmic Origins (CICO) postdoctoral fellowship. J.C.T. acknowledges support from ERC Advanced Grant MSTAR, VR grant Fire from Ice, and NSF grant AST-2206450. We thank Jan Henrik Bredehoeft for the helpful discussions. Y.Z. acknowledges the sponsorship from the Yangyang Development Fund. R.F. acknowledges support from the grants Juan de la Cierva FJC2021-046802-I, PID2020-114461GB-I00, and CEX2021-001131-S funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033, by "European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR," and by grant P20-00880 from the Consejeria de Transformacion Economica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades of the Junta de Andalucia. R.F. also acknowledges funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 101032092. D.M. and G.G. gratefully acknowledge the support of ANID through the BASAL project FB210003
Deuterium Fractionation across the Infrared Dark Cloud G034.77-00.55 interacting with the Supernova Remnant W44
Supernova remnants (SNRs) may regulate star formation in galaxies. For
example, SNR-driven shocks may form new molecular gas or compress pre-existing
clouds and trigger the formation of new stars. To test this scenario, we
measure the deuteration of , , a well-studied tracer
of pre-stellar cores, across the Infrared Dark Cloud (IRDC) G034.77-00.55,
known to be experiencing a shock interaction with the SNR W44. We use
NH and ND J=1-0 single pointing observations obtained with the
30m antenna at the Instituto de Radioastronomia Millimetrica to infer
toward five positions across the cloud, namely a massive
core, different regions across the shock front, a dense clump and ambient gas.
We find in the range 0.03-0.1, several orders of magnitude
larger than the cosmic D/H ratio (10). Across the shock front,
is enhanced by more than a factor of 2
(0.05-0.07) with respect to the ambient gas (0.03)
and similar to that measured generally in pre-stellar cores. Indeed, in the
massive core and dense clump regions of this IRDC we measure
}0.1. We find enhanced deuteration of across
the region of the shock, at a level that is enhanced with respect to regions of
unperturbed gas. It is possible that this has been induced by shock
compression, which would then be indirect evidence that the shock is triggering
conditions for future star formation. However, since unperturbed dense regions
also show elevated levels of deuteration, further, higher-resolution studies
are needed to better understand the structure and kinematics of the deuterated
material in the shock region, e.g., if it still in relatively diffuse form or
already organised in a population of low-mass pre-stellar cores.Comment: Accepted for publication on A&A; 8 pages, 5 figure
Polycrystalline ZrTe5 Parametrized as a Narrow-Band-Gap Semiconductor for Thermoelectric Performance
The transition-metal pentatellurides
HfTe
5
and
ZrTe
5
have been studied for their exotic transport properties with much debate over the transport mechanism, band gap, and cause of the resistivity behavior, including a large low-temperature resistivity peak. Single crystals grown by the chemical-vapor-transport method have shown an
n
−
p
transition of the Seebeck coefficient at the same temperature as a peak in the resistivity. We show that behavior similar to that of single crystals can be observed in iodine-doped polycrystalline samples but that undoped polycrystalline samples exhibit drastically different properties: they are
p
type over the entire temperature range. Additionally, the thermal conductivity for polycrystalline samples is much lower,
1.5
 
 
Wm
−
1
 
 
K
−
1
, than previously reported for single crystals. It is found that the polycrystalline
ZrTe
5
system can be modeled as a simple semiconductor with conduction and valence bands both contributing to transport, separated by a band gap of 20 meV. This model demonstrates to first order that a simple two-band model can explain the transition from
n
- to
p
-type behavior and the cause of the anomalous resistivity peak. Combined with the experimental data, the two-band model shows that carrier concentration variation is responsible for differences in behavior between samples. Using the two-band model, the thermoelectric performance at different doping levels is predicted, finding
z
T
=
0.2
and 0.1 for
p
and
n
type, respectively, at 300 K, and
z
T
=
0.23
and 0.32 for
p
and
n
type at 600 K. Given the reasonably high
z
T
that is comparable in magnitude for both
n
and
p
type, a thermoelectric device with a single compound used for both legs is feasible
Infrared attenuation due to phase change from amorphous to crystalline observed in astrochemical propargyl ether ices
Astrochemical ices are known to undergo morphological changes, from amorphous to crystalline, upon warming the ice from lower (10 K) to higher temperatures. Phase changes are mostly identified by the observation of significant changes in the InfraRed (IR) spectrum, where the IR bands that are broad in the amorphous phase are narrower and split when the ice turns crystalline. To-date all the molecules that are studied under astrochemical conditions are observed to follow such a behaviour without significant attenuation in the IR wavelength. However, in this paper we report a new observation when propargyl ether () is warmed from the amorphous phase, at 10 K, through the phase transition temperature of 170 K, the crystalline ice being found to strongly attenuate IR photons at the mid-IR wavelengths
Development and application of a Japanese model of the WHO fracture risk assessment tool (FRAXâ„¢)
SUMMARY: The present study estimated the 10-year probability using the Japanese version of WHO fracture risk assessment tool (FRAX) in order to determine fracture probabilities that correspond to intervention thresholds currently used in Japan and to resolve some issues for its use in Japan. INTRODUCTION: The objective of the present study was to evaluate a Japanese version of the WHO fracture risk assessment (FRAX) tool to compute 10-year probabilities of osteoporotic fracture in Japanese men and women. Since lumbar spine bone mineral density (BMD) is used preferentially as a site for assessment, and densitometers use Japanese reference data, a second aim was to investigate the suitability and impact of this practice in Japan. METHODS: Fracture probabilities were computed from published data on the fracture and death hazards in Japan. Probabilities took account of age, sex, the presence of clinical risk factors and femoral neck BMD. Fracture probabilities were determined that were equivalent to intervention thresholds currently used in Japan. The difference between T-scores derived from international reference data and that using Japanese-specific normal ranges was estimated from published sources. The gradient of risk of BMD for fracture in Japan was compared to that for BMD at the lumbar spine in the Hiroshima cohort. RESULTS: The 10-year probabilities of a major osteoporosis-related fracture that corresponded to current intervention thresholds ranged from approximately 5% at the age of 50 years to more than 20% at the age of 80 years. The use of femoral neck BMD predicts fracture as well as or better than BMD tests at the lumbar spine. There were small differences in T-scores between those used for the model and those derived from a Japanese reference population. CONCLUSIONS: The FRAX mark tool has been used to determine possible thresholds for therapeutic intervention, based on equivalence of risk with current guidelines. The approach will need to be supported by appropriate health economic analyses. Femoral neck BMD is suitable for the prediction of fracture risk among Japanese. However, when applying the FRAX model to Japan, T-scores and Z-scores should be converted to those derived from the international reference
Deuterium fractionation across the infrared-dark cloud G034.77-00.55 interacting with the supernova remnant W44
Supernova remnants (SNRs) may regulate star formation in galaxies. For example, SNR-driven shocks may form new molecular gas or compress pre-existing clouds and trigger the formation of new stars. Aims. To test this scenario, we measured the deuteration of N2H+, DNfrac 2H+- a well-studied tracer of pre-stellar cores - across the infrared-dark cloud (IRDC) G034.77-00.55, which is known to be experiencing a shock interaction with the SNR W44. Methods. We use N2H+ and N2D+ J = 1-0 single pointing observations obtained with the 30m antenna at the Instituto de Radioastronomia Millimetrica to infer DN2H+ frac towards five positions across the cloud, namely a massive core, different regions across the shock front, a dense clump, and ambient gas. Results. We find DN2H+ frac in the range 0.03-0.1, which is several orders of magnitude larger than the cosmic D/H ratio (∼10-5). The DN2H+ frac across the shock front is enhanced by more than a factor of 2 (DNfrac 2H+∼ 0.05-0.07) with respect to the ambient gas (=0.03) and similar to that measured generally in pre-stellar cores. Indeed, in the massive core and dense clump regions of this IRDC we measure DN2H+ frac ∼ 0.1
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