Detection of circumstellar CH2CHCN, CH2CN, CH3CCH and H2CS
M. Agundez, J. P. Fonfria, J. Cernicharo, J. R., Pardo, M. Guelin

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of specific organic molecules in the circumstellar envelope of an AGB star, revealing similarities and differences with dark cloud chemistry.
Contribution
It presents the first detection of vinyl cyanide, cyanomethyl radical, methylacetylene, and thioformaldehyde in an AGB star's envelope, expanding understanding of circumstellar chemistry.
Findings
Detected four molecules in IRC +10216 for the first time.
Derived molecular abundances and compared with chemical models.
Found similarities and differences with dark cloud chemistry.
Abstract
We report on the detection of vinyl cyanide (CH2CHCN), cyanomethyl radical (CH2CN), methylacetylene (CH3CCH) and thioformaldehyde (H2CS) in the C-rich star IRC +10216. These species, which are all known to exist in dark clouds, are detected for the first time in the circumstellar envelope around an AGB star. The four molecules have been detected trough pure rotational transitions in the course of a 3 mm line survey carried out with the IRAM 30-m telescope. The molecular column densities are derived by constructing rotational temperature diagrams. A detailed chemical model of the circumstellar envelope is used to analyze the formation of these molecular species. We have found column densities in the range 5 x 10^(12)- 2 x 10^(13) cm^(-2), which translates to abundances relative to H2 of several 10^(-9). The chemical model is reasonably successful in explaining the derived abundances…
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