Complex organic molecules in protostellar environments in the SKA era
C. Codella, L. Podio, F. Fontani, I. Jim\'enez-Serra, P. Caselli, C., Ceccarelli, M.E. Palumbo, A. L\'opez-Sepulcre, M.T. Beltr\'an, B. Lefloch,, J.R. Brucato, S. Viti, L. Testi

TL;DR
This paper reviews the formation and detection of complex organic molecules in star-forming regions, emphasizing recent observational advances and the potential of SKA to explore lower frequency spectra for understanding molecular complexity.
Contribution
It highlights the importance of SKA in observing COMs at lower frequencies and integrates recent observational and experimental findings in astrochemistry.
Findings
Detection of forests of COM lines in dense cores and protostars
Review of mm-FIR observations and open questions
Emphasis on SKA's role in future COM studies
Abstract
Molecular complexity builds up at each step of the Sun-like star formation process, starting from simple molecules and ending up in large polyatomic species. Complex organic molecules (COMs; such as methyl formate, HCOOCH, dymethyl ether, CHOCH, formamide, NHCHO, or glycoaldehyde, HCOCHOH) are formed in all the components of the star formation recipe (e.g. pre-stellar cores, hot-corinos, circumstellar disks, shocks induced by fast jets), due to ice grain mantle sublimation or sputtering as well as gas-phase reactions. Understanding in great detail the involved processes is likely the only way to predict the ultimate molecular complexity reached in the ISM, as the detection of large molecules is increasingly more difficult with the increase of the number of atoms constituting them. Thanks to the recent spectacular progress of astronomical observations, due to the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure · Advanced Thermodynamic Systems and Engines
