Detection of interstellar HCS and its metastable isomer HSC: new pieces in the puzzle of sulfur chemistry
M. Agundez, N. Marcelino, J. Cernicharo, and M. Tafalla

TL;DR
This paper reports the first detection of interstellar HCS and HSC radicals, providing new insights into sulfur chemistry in dark clouds and challenging existing chemical models.
Contribution
First identification of HCS and HSC radicals in space, offering new observational constraints on sulfur chemistry in dark clouds.
Findings
HCS and HSC detected in L483 with specific column densities
H2CS/HCS ratio is around 1, contrasting with oxygen analogues
Current models underestimate HCS abundance and lack HSC predictions
Abstract
We present the first identification in interstellar space of the thioformyl radical (HCS) and its metastable isomer HSC. These species were detected toward the molecular cloud L483 thanks to observations carried out with the IRAM 30m telescope in the 3 mm band. We derive beam-averaged column densities of 7e12 cm-2 for HCS and 1.8e11 cm-2 for HSC, which translate to fractional abundances relative to H2 of 2e-10 and 6e-12, respectively. Although the amount of sulfur locked by these radicals is low, their detection allows to put interesting constraints on the chemistry of sulfur in dark clouds. Interestingly, the H2CS/HCS abundance ratio is found to be quite low, around 1, in contrast with the oxygen analogue case, in which the H2CO/HCO abundance ratio is around 10 in dark clouds. Moreover, the radical HCS is found to be more abundant than its oxygen analogue, HCO. The metastable species…
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