Aromatics and Cyclic Molecules in Molecular Clouds: A New Dimension of Interstellar Organic Chemistry
Michael C. McCarthy, Brett A. McGuire

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent discoveries of aromatic and cyclic molecules in interstellar space, emphasizing laboratory spectroscopy efforts and the implications for understanding complex organic chemistry in star-forming regions.
Contribution
It highlights the detection of aromatic molecules like cyanobenzene and cyanonapthlenes in space, and discusses laboratory methods to identify and understand their formation pathways.
Findings
Detection of aromatic molecules in interstellar medium.
Laboratory spectroscopy advances for complex molecules.
Insights into chemical pathways for ring formation.
Abstract
Astrochemistry lies at the nexus of astronomy, chemistry, and molecular physics. On the basis of precise laboratory data, a rich collection of more than 200 familiar and exotic molecules have been identified in the interstellar medium, the vast majority by their unique rotational fingerprint. Despite this large body of work, there is scant evidence in the radio band for the basic building blocks of chemistry on earth -- five and six-membered rings -- despite long standing and sustained efforts during the past 50 years. In contrast, a peculiar structural motif, highly unsaturated carbon in a chain-like arrangement, is instead quite common in space. The recent astronomical detection of cyanobenzene, the simplest aromatic nitrile, in the dark molecular cloud TMC-1, and soon afterwards in additional pre-stellar, and possibly protostellar sources, establishes that aromatic chemistry is…
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