Discovery of two cyano derivatives of acenaphthylene (C$_{12}$H$_8$) in TMC-1 with the QUIJOTE line survey
J. Cernicharo, C. Cabezas, R. Fuentetaja, M. Ag\'undez, B. Tercero, J., Janeiro, M. Juanes, R. I. Kaiser, Y. Endo, A. L. Steber, D. P\'erez, C., P\'erez, A.Lesarri, N. Marcelino, P.de Vicente

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of two cyano derivatives of acenaphthylene in space, using radio observations, quantum calculations, and laboratory data, revealing insights into PAH chemistry in cold dark clouds.
Contribution
The paper presents the first identification of cyano derivatives of acenaphthylene in TMC-1, supported by laboratory and quantum chemical data, expanding knowledge of PAH molecules in space.
Findings
Detected two cyano derivatives of acenaphthylene in TMC-1.
Quantified their column densities and compared with naphthalene.
Supported PAH growth scenarios in cold dark clouds.
Abstract
We report the discovery in TMC-1 of two cyano derivatives of the PAH acenaphthylene (CH). We have found two series of lines with the QUIJOTE line survey that we assign to 1-CHCN and 5-CHCN. For the 1-isomer, we have detected and assigned 173 rotational transitions with up to 46 and up to 9, corresponding to 107 independent frequencies. For the 5-isomer, the identification is based on 56 individual lines, corresponding to 117 rotational transitions with up to 40 and up to 8. Identification of the carriers was achieved through a careful analysis of the derived rotational constants, which permit us to focus on molecules larger than naphthalene but smaller than anthracene and phenanthrene. Moreover, the derived rotational constants indicate that the species are planar; this allows us to discard derivatives of fluorene and acenaphthene,…
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.
