Observation of HCN hyperfine line anomalies towards low- and high-mass star-forming cores
R.M. Loughnane, M.P. Redman, M.A. Thompson, N. Lo, B. O'Dwyer, M.R, Cunningham

TL;DR
This study investigates HCN hyperfine line anomalies in star-forming cores, revealing their common occurrence and potential impact on astrophysical measurements, and suggests avoiding certain lines for accurate dynamical analysis.
Contribution
First observational survey of HCN hyperfine anomalies across low- and high-mass star-forming regions, analyzing their causes and implications for astrophysical studies.
Findings
All observed cores show some degree of hyperfine anomaly.
Many lines exhibit severe anomalies, affecting data interpretation.
Line overlap is favored as the cause of anomalies.
Abstract
HCN is becoming a popular choice of molecule for studying star formation in both low- and high-mass regions and for other astrophysical sources from comets to high-redshift galaxies. However, a major and often overlooked difficulty with HCN is that it can exhibit non-local thermodynamic equilibrium (non-LTE) behaviour in its hyperfine line structure. Individual hyperfine lines can be strongly boosted or suppressed. In low-mass star-forming cloud observations, this could possibly lead to large errors in the calculation of opacity and excitation temperature, while in massive star-forming clouds, where the hyperfine lines are blended due to turbulent broadening, errors will arise in infall measurements that are based on the separation of the peaks in a self-absorbed profile. The underlying line shape cannot be known for certain if hyperfine anomalies are present. We present a first…
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