Comparative study of complex N- and O-bearing molecules in hot molecular cores
F. Fontani, I. Pascucci, P. Caselli, F. Wyrowski, R. Cesaroni, C.M., Walmsley

TL;DR
This study investigates the chemical differentiation of N- and O-bearing molecules in hot molecular cores, revealing correlations in molecular abundances and estimating core ages, thereby enhancing understanding of chemical processes in star-forming regions.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of molecular emissions across multiple hot cores, testing the universality of chemical differentiation patterns and linking molecular abundances to core age and physical conditions.
Findings
Marginal velocity differences suggest possible spatial separation of molecules.
Abundance ratios indicate core ages between 37,000 and 59,000 years.
Strong correlations between molecular abundances support gas-phase formation pathways.
Abstract
We have observed several emission lines of two Nitrogen-bearing (C2H5CN and C2H3CN) and two Oxygen-bearing (CH3OCH3 and HCOOCH3) molecules towards a sample of well-known hot molecular cores (HMCs) in order to check whether the chemical differentiation seen in the Orion-HMC and W3(H_2O) between O- and N-bearing molecules is a general property of HMCs. With the IRAM-30m telescope we have observed 12 HMCs in 21 bands, centered at frequencies from 86250 to 258280 MHz. The rotational temperatures obtained range from ~100 to ~150 K in these HMCs. Single Gaussian fits performed to unblended lines show a marginal difference in the line peak velocities of the C2H5CN and CH3OCH3 lines, indicating a possible spatial separation between the region traced by the two molecules. On the other hand, neither the linewidths nor the rotational temperatures and column densities confirm such a result. By…
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