(sub)Millimeter Emission Lines of Molecules in Born-again Stars
D. Tafoya, J. A. Toal\'a, W. H. T. Vlemmings, M. A. Guerrero, E. De, Beck, M. Gonz\'alez, S. Kimeswenger, A. A. Zijlstra, \'A. S\'anchez-Monge,, and S. P. Trevi\~no-Morales

TL;DR
This study reports the first detections of molecular emission lines in born-again stars, revealing chemical compositions and physical conditions, and providing insights into their evolution and circumstellar environments.
Contribution
It presents the first detection of molecular emission in born-again stars and estimates their chemical abundances and physical parameters, advancing understanding of their circumstellar chemistry.
Findings
Detected HCN and H$^{13}$CN in V4334 Sgr.
Detected CO in V605 Aql.
Estimated H$^{12}$CN/H$^{13}$CN ratio of ~3 in V4334 Sgr.
Abstract
The detection and study of molecular gas in born-again stars would be of great importance to understand their composition and chemical evolution. In addition, the molecular emission would be an invaluable tool to explore the physical conditions, kinematics and formation of asymmetric structures in the circumstellar envelopes of these evolved stars. However, until now, all attempts to detect molecular emission from the cool material around born-again stars have failed. We carried out observations using the APEX and IRAM 30m telescopes to search for molecular emission toward four well studied born-again stars, V4334 Sgr, V605 Aql, A30 and A78, that are thought to represent an evolutionary sequence. We detected for the first time emission from HCN and HCN molecules toward V4334 Sgr, and CO emission in V605 Aql. No molecular emission was detected above the noise level toward A30 and…
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