Chemical compositions of five Planck cold clumps
V. Wakelam, P. Gratier, M. Ruaud, R. Le Gal, L. Majumdar, J.-C., Loison, and K. M. Hickson

TL;DR
This study surveys five Planck cold clumps, identifying their chemical compositions and physical conditions, and compares observed molecular abundances with chemical models to understand early star formation stages.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed chemical and physical characterization of five Planck cold clumps using molecular line observations and modeling, highlighting their less evolved state compared to well-known cold cores.
Findings
Twelve molecules detected, including H2CO, CS, SO, and others.
Sources have densities >10^4 cm^-3 and temperatures <15 K.
Chemical compositions are less rich than TMC-1 CP, indicating earlier evolutionary stages.
Abstract
Aims: Interstellar molecules form early in the evolutionary sequence of interstellar material that eventually forms stars and planets. To understand this evolutionary sequence, it is important to characterize the chemical composition of its first steps. Methods: In this paper, we present the result of a 2 and 3 mm survey of five cold clumps identified by the Planck mission. We carried out a radiative transfer analysis on the detected lines in order to put some constraints on the physical conditions within the cores and on the molecular column densities. We also performed chemical models to reproduce the observed abundances in each source using the gas-grain model Nautilus. Results: Twelve molecules were detected: H2CO, CS, SO, NO, HNO, HCO+, HCN, HNC, CN, CCH, CH3OH, and CO. Here, CCH is the only carbon chain we detected in two sources. Radiative transfer analyses of HCN, SO, CS, and CO…
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