Tentative detection of ethylene glycol toward W51/e2 and G34.3+0.2
Julie M. Lykke, C\'ecile Favre, Edwin A. Bergin, Jes K., J{\o}rgensen

TL;DR
This study reports a tentative detection of ethylene glycol in two high-mass star-forming regions, compares their molecular abundance ratios, and explores how source luminosity and evolutionary stage influence complex organic molecule formation.
Contribution
It provides the first tentative detection of ethylene glycol toward W51/e2 and G34.3+0.2, and analyzes the relative abundances of complex organic molecules in these sources.
Findings
Tentative detection of ethylene glycol in both sources.
Abundance ratios suggest a correlation with source luminosity.
High ethylene glycol to glycolaldehyde ratio is not unique to comets.
Abstract
How complex organic - and potentially prebiotic - molecules are formed in regions of low- and high-mass star-formation remains a central question in astrochemistry. In particular, with just a few sources studied in detail, it is unclear what role environment plays in complex molecule formation. In this light, a comparison of relative abundances of related species between sources might be useful to explain observed differences. We seek to measure the relative abundance between three important complex organic molecules, ethylene glycol ((CHOH)), glycolaldehyde (CHOHCHO) and methyl formate (HCOOCH), toward high-mass protostars and thereby provide additional constraints on their formation pathways. We use IRAM 30-m single dish observations of the three species toward two high-mass star-forming regions - W51/e2 and G34.3+0.2 - and report a tentative detection of (CH2OH)2…
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