The cometary composition of a protoplanetary disk as revealed by complex cyanides
Karin I. Oberg, Viviana V. Guzman, Kenji Furuya, Chunhua Qi, Yuri, Aikawa, Sean M. Andrews, Ryan Loomis, David J. Wilner

TL;DR
This study detects complex cyanides in a protoplanetary disk, revealing that rich organic chemistry similar to comets existed in the early Solar Nebula, which has implications for understanding the origins of organic molecules in planetary systems.
Contribution
It provides the first detection of complex cyanides in a protoplanetary disk, showing that such organics are present beyond our Solar System and are comparable to comet compositions.
Findings
Detection of CH3CN, HCN, and HC3N in the MWC 480 disk
Abundance ratios similar to those in comets
Implication of widespread complex organic molecules in planet-forming regions
Abstract
Observations of comets and asteroids show that the Solar Nebula that spawned our planetary system was rich in water and organic molecules. Bombardment brought these organics to the young Earth's surface, seeding its early chemistry. Unlike asteroids, comets preserve a nearly pristine record of the Solar Nebula composition. The presence of cyanides in comets, including 0.01% of methyl cyanide (CH3CN) with respect to water, is of special interest because of the importance of C-N bonds for abiotic amino acid synthesis. Comet-like compositions of simple and complex volatiles are found in protostars, and can be readily explained by a combination of gas-phase chemistry to form e.g. HCN and an active ice-phase chemistry on grain surfaces that advances complexity[3]. Simple volatiles, including water and HCN, have been detected previously in Solar Nebula analogues - protoplanetary disks around…
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.
