Cyanopolyyne chemistry in the L1544 prestellar core: new insights from GBT observations
Eleonora Bianchi, Anthony Remijan, Claudio Codella, Cecilia, Ceccarelli, Francois Lique, Silvia Spezzano, Nadia Balucani, Paola Caselli,, Eric Herbst, Linda Podio, Charlotte Vastel, Brett McGuire

TL;DR
This study uses GBT observations to analyze cyanopolyyne molecules in the prestellar core L1544, detecting HC9N for the first time and revealing insights into the chemical processes and physical conditions in star-forming regions.
Contribution
First detection of HC9N in L1544 and comprehensive modeling of cyanopolyyne chemistry with new collisional data, revealing detailed physical conditions and molecular abundance ratios.
Findings
HC9N detected for the first time in L1544.
Cyanopolyyne emission linked to the southern core region.
Abundance ratios of HC5N:HC7N:HC9N are approximately 1:6:4.
Abstract
We report a comprehensive study of the cyanopolyyne chemistry in the prototypical prestellar core L1544. Using the 100m Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope (GBT) we observe 3 emission lines of HCN, 9 lines of HCN, 5 lines of HCN, and 9 lines of HCN. HCN is detected for the first time towards the source. The high spectral resolution ( 0.05 km s) reveals double-peak spectral line profiles with the redshifted peak a factor 3-5 brighter. Resolved maps of the core in other molecular tracers indicates that the southern region is redshifted. Therefore, the bulk of the cyanopolyyne emission is likely associated with the southern region of the core, where free carbon atoms are available to form long chains, thanks to the more efficient illumination of the interstellar field radiation. We perform a simultaneous modelling of the HCN, HCN, and HCN…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate · Atomic and Molecular Physics
