Evolutionary study of complex organic molecules in high-mass star-forming regions
A. Coletta (1), F. Fontani (2), V. M. Rivilla (2), C. Mininni (1 and, 2), L. Colzi (1, 2), \'A. S\'anchez-Monge (3), M. T. Beltr\'an (2) ((1), Dipartimento di Fisica e Astronomia - Universit\`a degli Studi di Firenze,, (2) INAF - Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri

TL;DR
This study investigates four complex organic molecules in 39 high-mass star-forming regions, revealing their correlated abundances and suggesting early formation and preservation throughout star formation evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of multiple COMs across various evolutionary stages in high-mass star-forming regions, highlighting their correlated abundances and formation pathways.
Findings
Strong correlations between COM abundances across diverse sources.
Constant abundance ratios indicating early formation and preservation.
Abundances increase with evolutionary stage.
Abstract
We have studied four complex organic molecules (COMs), methyl formate (), dimethyl ether (), formamide (), and ethyl cyanide (), towards a large sample of 39 high-mass star-forming regions representing different evolutionary stages, from early to evolved phases. We aim to identify potential correlations between the molecules and to trace their evolutionary sequence through the star formation process. We analysed spectra obtained at 3, 2, and 0.9 mm with the IRAM-30m telescope. We derived the main physical parameters for each species by fitting the molecular lines. We compared them and evaluated their evolution, also taking several other interstellar environments into account. We report detections in 20 sources, revealing a clear dust absorption effect on column densities. Derived abundances are ~ for and ,…
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