S-bearing molecules in Massive Dense Cores
Fabrice Herpin (LAB), Matthieu Marseille (SRON), Valentine Wakelam, (LAB), Sylvain Bontemps (LAB), D.C. Lis (CALTECH)

TL;DR
This study investigates sulphur-bearing molecules in massive dense cores to understand their chemical evolution and potential as indicators of star formation stages, using multi-transition observations and modeling.
Contribution
It provides new observational data and modeling of sulphur chemistry in massive cores, proposing molecular ratios as evolutionary indicators.
Findings
SO and SO2 abundances increase with core evolution
CS and OCS abundances decrease with time
Molecular ratios can serve as evolutionary tracers
Abstract
Chemical composition of the massive cores forming high-mass stars can put some constrains on the time scale of the massive star formation: sulphur chemistry is of specific interest due to its rapid evolution in warm gas and because the abundance of sulphur bearing species increases significantly with the temperature. Two mid-infrared quiet and two brighter massive cores are observed in various transitions (E_up up to 289K) of CS, OCS, H2S, SO, SO2 and of their isotopologues at mm wavelengths with the IRAM 30m and CSO telescopes. 1D modeling of the dust continuum is used to derive the density and temperature laws, which are then applied in the RATRAN code to model the observed line emission, and to derive the relative abundances of the molecules. All lines, except the highest energy SO2 transition, are detected. Infall (up to 2.9km/s) may be detected towards the core W43MM1. The inferred…
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