The SVS13-A Class I chemical complexity as revealed by S-bearing species. SOLIS XIII
C. Codella, E. Bianchi, L. Podio, S. Mercimek, C. Ceccarelli, A., Lopez-Sepulcre, R. Bachiller, P. Caselli, N. Sakai, R. Neri, F. Fontani, C., Favre, N. Balucani, B. Lefloch, S. Viti, S. Yamamoto

TL;DR
This study maps sulfur-bearing molecules in a young star-forming region, revealing chemical compositions, spatial distributions, and evolutionary trends from Class 0 to Class I objects, highlighting the importance of large surveys.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed interferometric census of S-bearing species in SVS13-A, analyzing their spatial distribution and chemical evolution during early star formation.
Findings
SO traces a collimated jet driven by SVS13-B.
Inner region shows complex organic molecules and hot corino characteristics.
Sulfur-to-oxygen ratio increases with star formation stage.
Abstract
Aims: The goal is to obtain a census of S-bearing species using interferometric images, towards SVS13-A, a Class I object associated with a hot corino rich in interstellar complex organic molecules. Methods: We used data at 3mm and 1.4mm obtained with IRAM-NOEMA in the framework of the Large Program SOLIS. Results: We imaged the spatial distribution of the line emission of 32SO, 34SO, C32}S, C34S, C33S, OCS, H2C32S, H2C34S, and NS. The low excitation (9 K) 32SO line is tracing the fast collimated jet driven by the nearby SVS13-B. Conversely, the rest of the lines are confined in the inner SVS13-A region, where complex organics have been previously imaged. The non-LTE LVG analysis of SO, SO2, and H2CS indicates a hot corino origin (60-120 au). Temperatures between 50 K and 300 K, and volume densities larger than 10^5 cm-3 have been derived. The abundances are in the following ranges:…
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