Rethinking Habitability using Biogenic Precursors: Formaldehyde in Millimeter Molecular Clouds of the Inner Galaxy
Nursyazela Badrina Baharin, Affan Adly Nazri, Zulfazli Rosli, Zamri Zainal Abidin, Hairul Anuar Tajuddin, Jarken Esimbek, Dalei Li, Xiaoke Tang

TL;DR
This study investigates formaldehyde in molecular clouds across the inner Galaxy, revealing its widespread presence and implications for habitability and prebiotic chemistry, challenging traditional Galactic Habitable Zone models.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive survey of formaldehyde in the inner Galaxy, linking chemical presence to star formation and habitability considerations.
Findings
H2CO detected in 88 of 215 clouds, with 59 new detections.
H2CO spans galactocentric distances from 0.2 to 10.8 kpc.
Inverse correlation between H2CO detection and galactic distance.
Abstract
We present a comprehensive study of formaldehyde (H2CO) absorption and radio recombination line (H110a) emission in 215 molecular clouds from the Bolocam Galactic Plane Survey (BGPS), observed using the Nanshan 25-m radio telescope. H2CO was detected in 88 sources (40.93 percent) with 59 being new detections, while H110a emission was found in only 11 sources (5.12 percent), all coincident with H2CO absorption. There exists a correlation of H2CO fluxes with millimeter fluxes below a 3 Jy threshold and an increased dispersion above it, suggesting the sub-CMB cooling of H2CO. Cross-matching with kinematic distance catalogs revealed H2CO spanning galactocentric distances from 0.216 to 10.769 kpc, with column densities ranging from 7.82 x 10^11 to 6.69 x 10^14 cm-2. A significant inverse correlation was observed between H2CO detection fraction and galactocentric distance, suggesting enhanced…
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