Carbon-chain molecule survey toward four low-mass molecular outflow sources
C. Zhang, Y. Wu, X.-C. Liu, Mengyao Tang, Di Li, Jarken Esimbek and, S.-L. Qin

TL;DR
This study surveyed carbon-chain molecules in four low-mass star-forming regions, revealing chemical diversity, evolutionary trends, and potential warm carbon-chain chemistry, using radio telescopes to detect various hydrocarbons and related molecules.
Contribution
It provides new observational data on CCMs in low-mass outflow sources, highlighting chemical variations and evolutionary indicators not previously characterized in these environments.
Findings
Hydrocarbons detected in all sources except L1598.
N(HC3N)/N(N2H+) ratio increases with core evolution.
I04181 and L1524 are rich in carbon-chain molecules, possibly exhibiting warm carbon-chain chemistry.
Abstract
We performed a carbon-chain molecule (CCM) survey toward four low-mass outflow sources, IRAS 04181+2655 (I04181), HH211, L1524, and L1598, using the 13.7 m telescope at the Purple Mountain Observatory (PMO) and the 65 m Tian Ma Radio telescope at the Shanghai Observatory. We observed the following hydrocarbons (CH, CH, c--CH), HCN (n=1,2), CS (n=2,3), and SO, HNC, NH. Hydrocarbons and HCN were detected in all the sources, except for L1598, which had a marginal detection of CH and a non-detection of HCN (J=2--1). HCN and CCCS were only detected in I04181 and L1524, whereas SO was only detected in HH211. L1598 exhibits the lowest detection rate of CCMs and is generally regarded to be lacking in CCMs source. The ratio of N(HCN/N(NH)) increases with evolution in low-mass star-forming cores. I04181 and L1524 are…
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