Complex organic molecules in low-mass protostars on Solar System scales -- II. Nitrogen-bearing species
P. Nazari, M. L. van Gelder, E. F. van Dishoeck, B. Tabone, M. L. R., van 't Hoff, N. F. W. Ligterink, H. Beuther, A. C. A. Boogert, A. Caratti o, Garatti, P. D. Klaassen, H. Linnartz, V. Taquet, and {\L}. Tychoniec

TL;DR
This study investigates nitrogen-bearing complex organic molecules in two low-mass protostars using ALMA, revealing similarities and variations in their chemical compositions and suggesting shared chemical histories with implications for understanding planet formation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of N-bearing and O-bearing complex organic molecules in low-mass protostars at Solar System scales, highlighting their abundance ratios and potential chemical origins.
Findings
N-bearing molecules detected with similar abundances across sources
Abundance ratios of N- and O-bearing species vary by an order of magnitude
N-bearing species have excitation temperatures comparable to O-bearing species
Abstract
The chemical inventory of planets is determined by the physical and chemical processes that govern the early phases of star formation. The aim is to investigate N-bearing complex organic molecules towards two Class 0 protostars (B1-c and S68N) at millimetre wavelengths with ALMA. Next, the results of the detected N-bearing species are compared with those of O-bearing species for the same and other sources. ALMA observations in Band 6 ( 1 mm) and Band 5 ( 2 mm) are studied at 0.5" resolution, complemented by Band 3 ( 3 mm) data in a 2.5" beam. NH2CHO, C2H5CN, HNCO, HN13CO, DNCO, CH3CN, CH2DCN, and CHD2CN are identified towards the investigated sources. Their abundances relative to CH3OH and HNCO are similar for the two sources, with column densities that are typically an order of magnitude lower than those of O-bearing species. The largest variations, of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
