540 research outputs found
ASTRONOMICAL TRIPLETS: ALMA OBSERVATIONS OF C2H4O2 ISOMERS IN SGR B2 (N)
The triplet found in the interstellar medium (ISM) consists of glycolaldehyde (), acetic acid () and methyl formate (). The forming mechanism of their -bearing component involves both gas-phase and grain-surface processes whose relative roles plays into fundamental questions within the fields of astrochemistry and astrobiology. Glycolaldehyde is closely related to ribose and deoxyribose, the primary components of genetic materials. The first detection of Glycolaldehyde was toward Sgr B2 with using NRAO 12 m telescope in 2000 (J. M. Hollis et al). A new careful search for glycolaldehyde toward the hot dense core Sgr B2 (N) is needed. While methyl formate has a large number of detected transitions throughout the ISM, the detection of acetic acid, the least abundant of these isomers, is more tentative. Mehringer et al. (1997) reported only 4 lines of acetic acid toward Sgr B2 Large Molecule Heimat source. Here, we confirm these detections of each species toward Sgr B2 (N) with the more sensitive and larger bandwidth from ALMA Band 3 observations (A. Belloche, 2012), providing us more transitions and more accurate continuum subtraction. Based on these results, the abundances and spatial distributions of the triplet species would be obtained and compared
Astrochemical Modeling of Propargyl Radical Chemistry in TMC-1
Recent detections of aromatic species in dark molecular clouds suggest
formation pathways may be efficient at very low temperatures and pressures, yet
current astrochemical models are unable to account for their derived
abundances, which can often deviate from model predictions by several orders of
magnitude. The propargyl radical, a highly abundant species in the dark
molecular cloud TMC- 1, is an important aromatic precursor in combustion flames
and possibly interstellar environments. We performed astrochemical modeling of
TMC-1 using the three-phase gas-grain code NAUTILUS and an updated chemical
network, focused on refining the chemistry of the propargyl radical and related
species. The abundance of the propargyl radical has been increased by half an
order of magnitude compared to the previous GOTHAM network. This brings it
closer in line with observations, but it remains underestimated by two orders
of magnitude compared to its observed value. Predicted abundances for the
chemically related C4H3N isomers within an order of magnitude of observed
values corroborate the high efficiency of CN addition to closed-shell
hydrocarbons under dark molecular cloud conditions. The results of our modeling
provide insight into the chemical processes of the propargyl radical in dark
molecular clouds and highlight the importance of resonance-stabilized radicals
in PAH formation.Comment: 31 pages and 17 figures (including the appendix), accepted for
publication in The Astrophysical Journa
Detection of Interstellar HCNC and an Investigation of Isocyanopolyyne Chemistry under TMC-1 Conditions
We report an astronomical detection of HCNC for the first time in the
interstellar medium with the Green Bank Telescope toward the TMC-1 molecular
cloud with a minimum significance of . The total column density
and excitation temperature of HCNC are determined to be
cm and K,
respectively, using the MCMC analysis. In addition to HCNC, HCCNC is
distinctly detected whereas no clear detection of HCNC is made. We propose
that the dissociative recombination of the protonated cyanopolyyne,
HCNH, and the protonated isocyanopolyyne, HCNCH, are the main
formation mechanisms for HCNC while its destruction is dominated by
reactions with simple ions and atomic carbon. With the proposed chemical
networks, the observed abundances of HCNC and HCCNC are reproduced
satisfactorily.Comment: Accepted in the Astrophysical Journal Letter
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