A search for interstellar anthracene toward the Perseus anomalous microwave emission region
S. Iglesias-Groth, A. Manchado, R. Rebolo, J. I. Gonzalez Hernandez,, D. A. Garcia-Hernandez, D.L. Lambert

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of an interstellar anthracene cation band in the Perseus region, linking PAHs to anomalous microwave emission and providing insights into interstellar carbon chemistry.
Contribution
It identifies a specific PAH cation in a molecular cloud outside the Solar System, connecting PAHs to anomalous microwave emission phenomena.
Findings
Detection of a new interstellar band at 7088.8 Å matching anthracene cation.
Estimated anthracene cation abundance of about 0.008% of carbon in the cloud.
Support for PAHs as the source of anomalous microwave emission in Perseus.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a new broad interstellar (or circumstellar) band at 7088.8 +- 2.0 \AA coincident to within the measurement uncertainties with the strongest band of the anthracene cation (CH) as measured in gas-phase laboratory spectroscopy at low temperatures (Sukhorukov et al.2004). The band is detected in the line of sight of star Cernis 52, a likely member of the very young star cluster IC 348, and is probably associated with cold absorbing material in a intervening molecular cloud of the Perseus star forming region where various experiments have recently detected anomalous microwave emission. From the measured intensity and available oscillator strength we find a column density of N= 1.1(+-0.4) x 10 cm implying that ~0.008% of the carbon in the cloud could be in the form of CH. A similar abundance has been…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
