A new hot core in the outer Galaxy: Impact of metallicity on the formation of complex organic molecules
Youxin Wang, Arnaud Belloche, and Robin T. Garrod

TL;DR
This study investigates how metallicity influences the formation of complex organic molecules in star-forming regions of the outer Galaxy, revealing that lower metallicity affects chemical composition and molecule abundances.
Contribution
It provides new observational data and modeling insights into the impact of metallicity on COM formation in outer Galaxy hot cores.
Findings
COM abundances relative to methanol vary with metallicity
Carbon chains and nitriles are most negatively affected by reduced metallicity
Lower dust-to-gas ratio results in slower adsorption and enhanced CO-related COMs
Abstract
Many complex organic molecules (COMs) in star-forming regions are believed to form on dust grains. We thus expect both the reduced metallicity and dust-to-gas ratio in the outer Galaxy to have an impact on the chemical composition of these regions. We investigate if certain COMs are more sensitive than others to metallicity by measuring the chemical composition of hot cores in the outer Galaxy. We used NOEMA to perform an imaging spectral line survey of G135.27+2.79, located at a galactocentric distance of 13.1 kpc. We derived the rotational temperatures and column densities of the detected molecules while assuming local thermodynamic equilibrium and compared the chemical composition of G135.27+2.79 to other sources and to the predictions of the three-phase astrochemical code MAGICKAL. G135.27+2.79 hosts three continuum cores, labeled MM1, MM2, and MM3. Most species in MM1 trace a hot,…
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