Ethyl cyanide on Titan: Spectroscopic detection and mapping using ALMA
M. A. Cordiner, M. Y. Palmer, C. A. Nixon, P. G. J. Irwin, N. A., Teanby, S. B. Charnley, M. J. Mumma, Z. Kisiel, J. Serigano, Y.-J. Kuan,, Y.-L. Chuang, K.-S. Wang

TL;DR
This study reports the first spectroscopic detection and mapping of ethyl cyanide in Titan's atmosphere using ALMA, revealing its distribution, concentration, and suggesting a short chemical lifetime and specific production altitude.
Contribution
First spectroscopic detection of ethyl cyanide in Titan's atmosphere with detailed spatial and spectral analysis using ALMA.
Findings
27 rotational lines detected with >3σ confidence
C₂H₅CN concentrated in Titan's southern hemisphere
Most C₂H₅CN located at 300-600 km altitude
Abstract
We report the first spectroscopic detection of ethyl cyanide (CHCN) in Titan's atmosphere, obtained using spectrally and spatially resolved observations of multiple emission lines with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter array (ALMA). The presence of CHCN in Titan's ionosphere was previously inferred from Cassini ion mass spectrometry measurements of CHCNH. Here we report the detection of 27 rotational lines from CHCN (in 19 separate emission features detected at confidence), in the frequency range 222-241 GHz. Simultaneous detections of multiple emission lines from HCN, CHCN and CHCCH were also obtained. In contrast to HCN, CHCN and CHCCH, which peak in Titan's northern (spring) hemisphere, the emission from CHCN is found to be concentrated in the southern (autumn) hemisphere, suggesting a distinctly…
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.
