Dimethyl ether in its ground state, v=0, and lowest two torsionally excited states, v11=1 and v15=1, in the high-mass star-forming region G327.3-0.6
Suzanne E. Bisschop, Peter Schilke, Friedrich Wyrowski, Arnaud, Belloche, Christian Brinch, Christian P. Endres, Rolf G\"usten, Heiko Hafok,, Stefan Heyminck, Jes K. J{\o}rgensen, Holger S.P. M\"uller, Karl M. Menten,, Rainer Rolffs, Stephan Schlemmer

TL;DR
This study analyzes the excitation and formation mechanisms of dimethyl ether in a high-mass star-forming region, revealing that solid-state processes dominate at lower temperatures while gas-phase formation is prevalent above 100 K.
Contribution
It provides first detections of torsionally excited states v11=1 and v15=1 of dimethyl ether in G327.3-0.6 and models their excitation and spatial distribution.
Findings
Most dimethyl ether is in gas warmer than 100 K.
A small fraction (5-28%) exists at 70-100 K, likely formed in solid state.
Torsionally excited states are easily detectable in hot cores.
Abstract
The goal of this paper is to determine the respective importance of solid state vs. gas phase reactions for the formation of dimethyl ether. This is done by a detailed analysis of the excitation properties of the ground state and the torsionally excited states, v11=1 and v15=1, toward the high-mass star-forming region G327.3-0.6. With the Atacama Pathfinder EXperiment 12 m submillimeter telescope, we performed a spectral line survey. The observed spectrum is modeled assuming local thermal equilibrium. CH3OCH3 has been detected in the ground state, and in the torsionally excited states v11=1 and v15=1, for which lines have been detected here for the first time. The emission is modeled with an isothermal source structure as well as with a non-uniform spherical structure. For non-uniform source models one abundance jump for dimethyl ether is sufficient to fit the emission, but two…
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