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Chemical Complexity Induced by Efficient Ice Evaporation in the Barnard 5 Molecular CloudCold gas-phase water has recently been detected in a cold dark cloud, Barnard 5 located in the Perseus complex, by targeting methanol peaks as signposts for ice mantle evaporation. Observed morphology and abundances of methanol and water are consistent with a transient non-thermal evaporation process only affecting the outermost ice mantle layers, possibly triggering a more complex chemistry. Here we present the detection of the complex organic molecules (COMs) acetaldehyde (CH3CHO) and methyl formate (CH3OCHO), as well as formic acid (HCOOH) and ketene (CH2CO), and the tentative detection of di-methyl ether (CH3OCH3) towards the ''methanol hotspot'' of Barnard 5 located between two dense cores using the single dish OSO 20 m, IRAM 30 m, and NRO 45 m telescopes. The high energy cis-conformer of formic acid is detected, suggesting that formic acid is mostly formed at the surface of interstellar grains and then evaporated. The detection of multiple transitions for each species allows us to constrain their abundances through LTE and non-LTE methods. All the considered COMs show similar abundances between approx. 1 and approx. 10% relative to methanol depending on the assumed excitation temperature. The non-detection of glycolaldehyde, an isomer of methyl formate, with a [glycolaldehyde]/[methyl formate] abundance ratio lower than 6%, favours gas phase formation pathways triggered by methanol evaporation. According to their excitation temperatures derived in massive hot cores, formic acid, ketene, and acetaldehyde have been designated as ''lukewarm'' COMs whereas methyl formate and di-methyl ether were defined as ''warm'' species. Comparison with previous observations of other types of sources confirms that lukewarm and warm COMs show similar abundances in low-density cold gas whereas the warm COMs tend to be more abundant than the lukewarm species in warm protostellar cores. This abundance evolution suggests either that warm COMs are indeed mostly formed in protostellar environments and/or that lukewarm COMs are efficiently depleted by increased hydrogenation efficiency around protostars.
Document ID
20180003587
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Taquet, V.
(Leiden Univ. Netherlands)
Wirstrom, E. S.
(Chalmers Univ. of Technology Goeteborg, Sweden)
Charnley, Steven B.
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD, United States)
Faure, A.
(Universite Grenoble Alpes Saint Martin d'Heres, France)
Lopez-Sepulcre, A.;
(Tokyo Univ. Japan)
Persson, C. M.
(Onsala Space Observatory Sweden)
Date Acquired
June 13, 2018
Publication Date
October 31, 2017
Publication Information
Publication: Astronomy and Astrophysics
Publisher: EDP Sciences
Volume: 607
ISSN: 0004-6361
e-ISSN: 1432-0746
Subject Category
Space Sciences (General)
Report/Patent Number
GSFC-E-DAA-TN53275
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: A-ERC 291141 CHEMPLAN
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
ISM: molecules
ISM: clouds
astrochemistry
stars: formation
molecular processes
ISM: abundances

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