Deep K-band observations of TMC-1 with the Green Bank Telescope: Detection of HC7O, non-detection of HC11N, and a search for new organic molecules
M. A. Cordiner, S. B. Charnley, Z. Kisiel, B. A. McGuire, Y.-J. Kuan

TL;DR
This study used the Green Bank Telescope to detect HC7O in TMC-1, set upper limits on related molecules, and searched for new organic molecules, advancing understanding of complex organics in cold interstellar environments.
Contribution
First detection of HC7O in TMC-1 and detailed isotopologue analysis, along with non-detections of HC11N and other prebiotic molecules, providing new insights into interstellar chemistry.
Findings
Detected HC7O with a column density of (7.8±0.9)×10^{11} cm^{-2}
First isotopologue abundance ratios indicating ^13C depletion in HC7N
Confirmed non-detection of HC11N, setting a lower upper limit than previous claims
Abstract
The 100 m Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope K-band (KFPA) receiver was used to perform a high-sensitivity search for rotational emission lines from complex organic molecules in the cold interstellar medium towards TMC-1 (cyanopolyyne peak), focussing on the identification of new carbon-chain-bearing species as well as molecules of possible prebiotic relevance. We report a detection of the carbon-chain oxide species HCO and derive a column density of ~cm. This species is theorized to form as a result of associative electron detachment reactions between oxygen atoms and CH, and/or reaction of CH with CO (followed by dissociative electron recombination). Upper limits are given for the related HCO, CO and CO molecules. In addition, we obtained the first detections of emission from individual C isotopologues of…
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