A high resolution study of complex organic molecules in hot cores
Hannah Calcutt, Serena Viti, Claudio Codella, Maria T. Beltr\'an,, Francesco Fontani, Paul M. Woods

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution interferometric data to identify complex organic molecules in hot cores, revealing chemical diversity and potential evolutionary differences among these star-forming regions.
Contribution
First detection of vibrationally excited methyl formate and possible glycolaldehyde in multiple hot cores, with detailed molecular distribution analysis.
Findings
G29.96-0.02, G19.61-0.23, G24.78+0.08A1, and A2 are chemically similar.
G31.41+0.31 has a larger chemical inventory and higher column densities.
Glycolaldehyde distribution differs in G31.41+0.31, indicating different physical conditions.
Abstract
We present the results of a line identification analysis using data from the IRAM Plateau de Bure Inferferometer, focusing on six massive star-forming hot cores: G31.41+0.31, G29.96-0.02, G19.61-0.23, G10.62-0.38, G24.78+0.08A1 and G24.78+0.08A2. We identify several transitions of vibrationally excited methyl formate (HCOOCH) for the first time in these objects as well as transitions of other complex molecules, including ethyl cyanide (CHCN), and isocyanic acid (HNCO). We also postulate a detection of one transition of glycolaldehyde (CH(OH)CHO) in two new hot cores. We find G29.96-0.02, G19.61-0.23, G24.78+0.08A1 and 24.78+0.08A2 to be chemically very similar. G31.41+0.31, however, is chemically different: it manifests a larger chemical inventory and has significantly larger column densities. We suggest that it may represent a different evolutionary stage to the other…
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