The Role of Terahertz and Far-IR Spectroscopy in Understanding the Formation and Evolution of Interstellar Prebiotic Molecules
Duncan V. Mifsud, Perry A. Hailey, Alejandra Traspas Muina, Olivier, Auriacombe, Sergio Ioppolo, Nigel J. Mason

TL;DR
This review highlights how terahertz and far-IR spectroscopy, alongside other methods, enhance our understanding of the formation and evolution of prebiotic molecules in interstellar environments, emphasizing future research directions.
Contribution
It introduces the potential of THz/F-IR spectroscopy as a complementary tool to mid-IR in astrochemistry, especially for studying intermolecular interactions related to prebiotic molecules.
Findings
THz/F-IR spectroscopy provides unique insights into intermolecular interactions.
Laboratory and observational methods are crucial for understanding prebiotic molecule formation.
Future research should integrate space-borne and laboratory spectroscopy techniques.
Abstract
Stellar systems are often formed through the collapse of dense molecular clouds which, in turn, return copious amounts of atomic and molecular material to the interstellar medium. An in-depth understanding of chemical evolution during this cyclic interaction between the stars and the interstellar medium is at the heart of astrochemistry. Systematic chemical composition changes as interstellar clouds evolve from the diffuse stage to dense, quiescent molecular clouds to star-forming regions and proto-planetary disks further enrich the molecular diversity leading to the evolution of ever more complex molecules. In particular, the icy mantles formed on interstellar dust grains and their irradiation are thought to be the origin of many of the observed molecules, including those that are deemed to be prebiotic; that is those molecules necessary for the origin of life. This review will discuss…
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.
