Hot Corinos Chemical Diversity: Myth or Reality?
Marta De Simone, Cecilia Ceccarelli, Claudio Codella, Brian E., Svoboda, Claire Chandler, Mathilde Bouvier, Satoshi Yamamoto, Nami Sakai,, Paola Caselli, Cecile Favre, Laurent Loinard, Bertrand Lefloch, Hauyu Baobab, Liu, Ana L\'opez-Sepulcre, Jaime E. Pineda, Vianney Taquet

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that dust opacity can hide complex organic molecules in hot corinos at millimeter wavelengths, and that centimeter observations reveal their true chemical richness, affecting the understanding of their prevalence and composition.
Contribution
The paper provides evidence that dust opacity explains the apparent chemical differences in binary hot corinos and emphasizes the importance of centimeter observations for accurate chemical analysis.
Findings
Centimeter methanol lines are similarly bright in both hot corino components.
Dust opacity causes underestimation of molecular abundances at millimeter wavelengths.
Centimeter observations reveal hot corinos are more chemically similar than previously thought.
Abstract
After almost 20 years of hunting, only about a dozen hot corinos, hot regions enriched in interstellar complex organic molecules (iCOMs), are known. Of them, many are binary systems with the two components showing drastically different molecular spectra. Two obvious questions arise. Why are hot corinos so difficult to find and why do their binary components seem chemically different? The answer to both questions could be a high dust opacity that would hide the molecular lines. To test this hypothesis, we observed methanol lines at centimeter wavelengths, where dust opacity is negligible, using the Very Large Array interferometer. We targeted the NGC 1333 IRAS 4A binary system, for which one of the two components, 4A1, has a spectrum deprived of iCOMs lines when observed at millimeter wavelengths, while the other component, 4A2, is very rich in iCOMs. We found that centimeter methanol…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
