A search for cloud cores affected by shocked carbon chain chemistry in L1251
Xunchuan Liu, Y. Wu, C. Zhang, X. Chen, L.-H. Lin, S.-L. Qin, T. Liu,, C. Henkel, J. Wang, H.-L. Liu, J. Yuan, L.-X. Yuan, J. Li, Z.-Q. Shen, D. Li,, J. Esimbek, K. Wang, L.-X. Li, Kee-Tae Kim, L. Zhu, D. Madones, N. Inostroza,, F.-Y. Meng, Tianwei Zhang, K. Tatematsu, Y. Xu

TL;DR
This study investigates shocked carbon chain chemistry in the dark cloud L1251, identifying key sources and analyzing their molecular and structural properties to understand the impact of outflows and stellar feedback.
Contribution
The paper presents the first identification of SCCC sources in L1251 and links outflow activities to the chemistry and morphology of the region.
Findings
L1251-1 and L1251-3 are prominent SCCC sources with young stellar objects.
Filamentary structures and outflows influence the chemistry and morphology.
SCCC is associated with outflow activities from infrared sources in L1251-A.
Abstract
We searched for shocked carbon chain chemistry (SCCC) sources with CS abundances surpassing those of HCN towards the dark cloud L1251, using the Effelsberg telescope at K-band (18 -- 26\,GHz). L1251-1 and L1251-3 are identified as the most promising SCCC sources. The two sources harbor young stellar objects. We conducted mapping observations towards L1251-A, the western tail of L1251, at 3\,mm with the PMO 13.7 m and the NRO 45 m telescopes in lines of CH, NH, CS, HCO, SO, HCN and CO as well as in CO 3--2 using the JCMT. The spectral data were combined with archival data including Spitzer and Herschel continuum maps for further analysis. Filamentary sub-structures labeled as F1 to F6 were extracted in L1251, with F1 being associated with L1251-A hosting L1251-1. The peak positions of dense gas traced by HCO are misaligned relative…
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