452 research outputs found
A search for interstellar anthracene toward the Perseus anomalous microwave emission region
We report the discovery of a new broad interstellar (or circumstellar) band
at 7088.8 +- 2.0 \AA coincident to within the measurement uncertainties with
the strongest band of the anthracene cation (CH) as measured
in gas-phase laboratory spectroscopy at low temperatures (Sukhorukov et
al.2004). The band is detected in the line of sight of star Cernis 52, a likely
member of the very young star cluster IC 348, and is probably associated with
cold absorbing material in a intervening molecular cloud of the Perseus star
forming region where various experiments have recently detected anomalous
microwave emission. From the measured intensity and available oscillator
strength we find a column density of N= 1.1(+-0.4) x 10
cm implying that ~0.008% of the carbon in the cloud could be in the form
of CH. A similar abundance has been recently claimed for the
naphthalene cation (Iglesias-Groth et al. 2008) in this cloud. This is the
first location outside the Solar System where specific PAHs are identified. We
report observations of interstellar lines of CH and CH that support a
rather high column density for these species and for molecular hydrogen. The
strength ratio of the two prominent diffuse interstellar bands at 5780 and 5797
\AA suggests the presence of a ``zeta'' type cloud in the line of sight
(consistent with steep far-UV extinction and high molecular content). The
presence of PAH cations and other related hydrogenated carbon molecules which
are likely to occur in this type of clouds reinforce the suggestion that
electric dipole radiation from fast spinning PAHs is responsible of the
anomalous microwave emission detected toward Perseus.Comment: Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical
Societ
The Chemical Composition of Cernis 52 (BD+31 640)
We present an abundance analysis of the star Cernis 52 in whose spectrum we
recently reported the napthalene cation in absorption at 6707.4 {\AA}. This
star is on a line of sight to the Perseus molecular complex. The analysis of
high-resolution spectra using a chi^2-minimization procedure and a grid of
synthetic spectra provides the stellar parameters and the abundances of O, Mg,
Si, S, Ca, and Fe. The stellar parameters of this star are found to be T_{eff}
= 8350 +- 200 K, logg= 4.2 +- 0.4 dex. We derived a metallicity of [Fe/H] =
-0.01 +- 0.15. These stellar parameters are consistent with a star of
\Msun in a pre-main-sequence evolutionary stage. The stellar spectrum is
significantly veiled in the spectral range 5150-6730 {\AA} up to almost 55 per
cent of the total flux at 5150 {\AA} and decreasing towards longer wavelengths.
Using Johnson-Cousins and 2MASS photometric data, we determine a distance to
Cernis 52 of 231 pc considering the error bars of the stellar
parameters. This determination places the star at a similar distance to the
young cluster IC 348. This together with its radial velocity, v_r=13.7+-1 km/s,
its proper motion and probable young age support Cernis 52 as a likely member
of IC 348. We determine a rotational velocity of v\sin i=65 +- 5 km/s for this
star. We confirm that the stellar resonance line of \ion{Li}{1} at 6707.8 {\AA}
is unable to fit the broad feature at 6707.4 {\AA}. This feature should have a
interstellar origin and could possibly form in the dark cloud L1470 surrounding
all the cluster IC 348 at about the same distance.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
Evidence for the naphthalene cation in a region of the interstellar medium with anomalous microwave emission
We report high resolution spectroscopy of the moderately reddened (A=3)
early type star Cernis 52 located in a region of the Perseus molecular cloud
complex with anomalous microwave emission. In addition to the presence of the
most common diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs) we detect two new interstellar or
circumstellar bands coincident to within 0.01% in wavelength with the two
strongest bands of the naphthalene cation (CH) as measured in
gas-phase laboratory spectroscopy at low temperatures and find marginal
evidence for the third strongest band.
Assuming these features are caused by the naphthalene cation, from the
measured intensity and available oscillator strengths we find that 0.008 % of
the carbon in the cloud could be in the form of this molecule. We expect
hydrogen additions to cause hydronaphthalene cations to be abundant in the
cloud and to contribute via electric dipole radiation to the anomalous
microwave emission. The identification of new interstellar features consistent
with transitions of the simplest polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon adds support
to the hypothesis that this type of molecules are the carriers of both diffuse
interstellar bands and anomalous microwave emission.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
Chaotic exchange of solid material between planetary systems: implications for lithopanspermia
We examine a low energy mechanism for the transfer of meteoroids between two
planetary systems embedded in a star cluster using quasi-parabolic orbits of
minimal energy. Using Monte Carlo simulations, we find that the exchange of
meteoroids could have been significantly more efficient than previously
estimated. Our study is relevant to astrobiology as it addresses whether life
on Earth could have been transferred to other planetary systems in the solar
system's birth cluster and whether life on Earth could have been transferred
here from beyond the solar system. In the solar system, the timescale over
which solid material was delivered to the region from where it could be
transferred via this mechanism likely extended to several hundred million years
(as indicated by the 3.8-4.0 Ga epoch of the Late Heavy Bombardment). This
timescale could have overlapped with the lifetime of the Solar birth cluster
(~100-500 Myr). Therefore, we conclude that lithopanspermia is an open
possibility if life had an early start. Adopting parameters from the minimum
mass solar nebula, considering a range of planetesimal size distributions
derived from observations of asteroids and Kuiper Belt Objects and theoretical
coagulation models, and taking into account Oort Cloud formation models, the
expected number of bodies with mass > 10 kg that could have been transferred
between the Sun and its nearest cluster neighbor could be of the order of
1E14-3E16, with transfer timescales of 10s Myr. We estimate that of the order
of 3E8 x l(km) could potentially be life-bearing, where l(km) is the depth of
the Earth crust in km that was ejected as the result of the early bombardment.Comment: Accepted by Astrobiology. Submitted: Sep. 21, 2011. Accepted: May 2,
2012. 39 pages. 21 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:0808.326
The formation of fullerenes: clues from new C60, C70, and (possible) planar C24 detections in Magellanic Cloud Planetary Nebulae
We present ten new Spitzer detections of fullerenes in Magellanic Cloud
Planetary Nebulae, including the first extragalactic detections of the C70
molecule. These new fullerene detections together with the most recent
laboratory data permit us to report an accurate determination of the C60 and
C70 abundances in space. Also, we report evidence for the possible detection of
planar C24 in some of our fullerene sources, as indicated by the detection of
very unusual emission features coincident with the strongest transitions of
this molecule at ~6.6, 9.8, and 20 um. The infrared spectra display a complex
mix of aliphatic and aromatic species such as hydrogenated amorphous carbon
grains (HACs), PAH clusters, fullerenes, and small dehydrogenated carbon
clusters (possible planar C24). The coexistence of such a variety of molecular
species supports the idea that fullerenes are formed from the decomposition of
HACs. We propose that fullerenes are formed from the destruction of HACs,
possibly as a consequence of shocks driven by the fast stellar winds, which can
sometimes be very strong in transition sources and young PNe. This is supported
by the fact that many of our fullerene-detected PNe show altered [NeIII]/[NeII]
ratios suggestive of shocks as well as P-Cygni profiles in their UV lines
indicative of recently enhanced mass loss.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters (16
pages, 2 Tables and 3 figures
Formation of unsaturated hydrocarbons in interstellar ice analogs by cosmic rays
The formation of double and triple C-C bonds from the processing of pure
c-C6H12 (cyclohexane) and mixed H2O:NH3:c-C6H12 (1:0.3:0.7) ices by
highly-charged, and energetic ions (219 MeV O^{7+} and 632 MeV Ni^{24+}) is
studied. The experiments simulate the physical chemistry induced by medium-mass
and heavy-ion cosmic rays in interstellar ices analogs. The measurements were
performed inside a high vacuum chamber at the heavy-ion accelerator GANIL
(Grand Accel\'erat\'eur National d'Ions Lourds) in Caen, France. The gas
samples were deposited onto a polished CsI substrate previously cooled to 13 K.
In-situ analysis was performed by a Fourier transform infrared (FTIR)
spectrometry at different ion fluences. Dissociation cross section of
cyclohexane and its half-life in astrophysical environments were determined. A
comparison between spectra of bombarded ices and young stellar sources
indicates that the initial composition of grains in theses environments should
contain a mixture of H2O, NH3, CO (or CO2), simple alkanes, and CH3OH. Several
species containing double or triple bounds were identified in the radiochemical
products, such as hexene, cyclohexene, benzene, OCN-, CO, CO2, as well as
several aliphatic and aromatic alkenes and alkynes. The results suggest an
alternative scenario for the production of unsaturated hydrocarbons and
possibly aromatic rings (via dehydrogenation processes) in interstellar ices
induced by cosmic ray bombardment.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, 4 tables. Accepted to be published in MNRA
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