Astrochemical evolution along star formation: Overview of the IRAM Large Program ASAI
B. Lefloch, R. Bachiller, C. Ceccarelli, J. Cernicharo, C. Codella, A., Fuente, C. Kahane, A. L\'opez-Sepulcre, M. Tafalla, C. Vastel, E. Caux, M., Gonz\'alez-Garc\'ia, E. Bianchi, A. G\'omez-Ruiz, J. Holdship, E. Mendoza, J., Ospina-Zamudio, L. Podio, D. Qu\'enard, E. Roueff

TL;DR
This study presents the IRAM ASAI program, which conducts unbiased millimeter surveys of star-forming regions to understand chemical evolution from prestellar cores to protostars, revealing early chemical complexity.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the IRAM ASAI survey, highlighting the chemical diversity and richness in early star formation stages.
Findings
Similar molecular content across evolutionary stages.
Identification of two chemical classes: O-rich and hydrocarbon-rich envelopes.
High chemical richness present early in star formation.
Abstract
Evidence is mounting that the small bodies of our Solar System, such as comets and asteroids, have at least partially inherited their chemical composition from the first phases of the Solar System formation. It then appears that the molecular complexity of these small bodies is most likely related to the earliest stages of star formation. It is therefore important to characterize and to understand how the chemical evolution changes with solar-type protostellar evolution. We present here the Large Program "Astrochemical Surveys At IRAM" (ASAI). Its goal is to carry out unbiased millimeter line surveys between 80 and 272 GHz of a sample of ten template sources, which fully cover the first stages of the formation process of solar-type stars, from prestellar cores to the late protostellar phase. In this article, we present an overview of the surveys and results obtained from the analysis of…
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