Interstellar and circumstellar fullerenes
J. Bernard-Salas, J. Cami, A.P. Jones, E. Peeters, E.R. Micelotta, M., Otsuka, G.C. Sloan, F. Kemper, M. Groenewegen

TL;DR
Fullerenes are stable carbon molecules detected in space, crucial for understanding organic molecule formation, with ongoing questions about their specific types, formation processes, and excitation mechanisms in interstellar environments.
Contribution
This paper provides a comprehensive overview of astronomical observations of fullerenes, discusses formation mechanisms, and explores their environmental conditions and connections to other cosmic dust features.
Findings
Fullerenes like C60 and C70 are detected in various space environments.
Fullerenes are the first large aromatics firmly identified in space.
Understanding fullerenes aids in studying organic molecule formation in the galaxy.
Abstract
Fullerenes are a particularly stable class of carbon molecules in the shape of a hollow sphere or ellipsoid that might be formed in the outflows of carbon stars. Once injected into the interstellar medium (ISM), these stable species survive and are thus likely to be widespread in the Galaxy where they contribute to interstellar extinction, heating processes, and complex chemical reactions. In recent years, the fullerene species C60 (and to a lesser extent C70) have been detected in a wide variety of circumstellar and interstellar environments showing that when conditions are favourable, fullerenes are formed efficiently. Fullerenes are the first and only large aromatics firmly identified in space. The detection of fullerenes is thus crucial to provide clues as to the key chemical pathways leading to the formation of large complex organic molecules in space, and offers a great diagnostic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Fullerene Chemistry and Applications · Pharmacological Effects and Assays
