Detection of Interstellar H$_2$CCCHC$_3$N
C. N. Shingledecker, K. L. K. Lee, J. T. Wandishin, N. Balucani, A. M., Burkhardt, S. B. Charnley, R. Loomis, M. Schreffler, M. Siebert, M. C., McCarthy, B. A. McGuire

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of cyanoacetyleneallene (H2CCCHC3N) in space, investigates its formation pathways in cold molecular clouds, and models its abundance through gas-phase and grain-surface reactions.
Contribution
It provides the first observational evidence of H2CCCHC3N in space and explores its formation mechanisms via astrochemical modeling.
Findings
First detection of H2CCCHC3N in TMC-1
Gas-phase formation route matches observed abundance
Grain-surface pathway produces significant ice-phase precursors
Abstract
The chemical pathways linking the small organic molecules commonly observed in molecular clouds to the large, complex, polycyclic species long-suspected to be carriers of the ubiquitous unidentified infrared emission bands remain unclear. To investigate whether the formation of mono- and poly-cyclic molecules observed in cold cores could form via the bottom-up reaction of ubiquitous carbon-chain species with, e.g. atomic hydrogen, a search is made for possible intermediates in data taken as part of the GOTHAM (GBT Observations of TMC-1 Hunting for Aromatic Molecules) project. Markov-Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) Source Models were run to obtain column densities and excitation temperatures. Astrochemical models were run to examine possible formation routes, including a novel grain-surface pathway involving the hydrogenation of CN and HCN, as well as purely gas-phase reactions between…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure · Advanced Combustion Engine Technologies
