Cyclopropenone (c-C3H2O) as a Tracer of the Nonequilibrium Chemistry Mediated by Galactic Cosmic Rays in Interstellar Ices

The Astrophysical Journal(2021)

Cited 16|Views7
No score
Abstract
Abstract While gas-phase astrochemical reaction networks nicely replicate the abundance of hydrogen-deficient organics like linear cyanopolyynes, pathways to complex organic molecules (COMs)—organic molecules with six or more atoms—have not been completely understood, with gas-phase models often significantly underestimating fractional abundances of the astronomically observed organics by orders of magnitude. Here, by exploiting cyclopropenone (c-C3H2O) as a tracer, laboratory experiments on the processing of an ice mixture of acetylene(C2H2) and carbon monoxide (CO) by energetic electrons coupled with astrochemical model simulations expose a previously poorly explored reaction class leading to COMs via galactic cosmic-ray-mediated nonequilibrium chemistry. These processes occur within interstellar ices at ultralow temperatures, but not through traditional radical–radical pathways on grain surfaces in the warm-up phase of the ices as hypothesized for the last decades, but more likely through barrierless excited state reactions during the irradiation.
More
Translated text
Key words
Turbulence
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined