The SOFIA Massive (SOMA) Star Formation Q-band follow-up: I. Carbon-chain chemistry of intermediate-mass protostars
Journal article, 2024

Context. Evidence that the chemical characteristics around low- and high-mass protostars are similar has been found: notably, a variety of carbon-chain species and complex organic molecules (COMs) form around both types. On the other hand, the chemical compositions around intermediate-mass (IM) protostars (2 M- < m∗ < 8 M-) have not been studied with large samples. In particular, it is unclear the extent to which carbon-chain species form around them. Aims. We aim to obtain the chemical compositions of a sample of IM protostars, focusing particularly on carbon-chain species. We also aim to derive the rotational temperatures of HC5N to confirm whether carbon-chain species are formed in the warm gas around these stars. Methods. We conducted Q-band (31.5-50 GHz) line survey observations toward 11 mainly IM protostars with the Yebes 40 m radio telescope. The target protostars were selected from a subsample of the source list of the SOFIA Massive Star Formation project. Assuming local thermodynamic equilibrium, we derived the column densities of the detected molecules and the rotational temperatures of HC5N and CH3 OH. Results. Nine carbon-chain species (HC3N, HC5N, C3H, C4H linear-H2CCC, cyclic-C3H2, CCS, C3S, and CH3CCH), three COMs (CH3OH, CH3CHO, and CH3CN), H2CCO, HNCO, and four simple sulfur-bearing species (13CS, C34S, HCS+, and H2CS) are detected. The rotational temperatures of HC5N are derived to be ~20-30 K in three IM protostars (Cepheus E, HH288, and IRAS 20293+3952). The rotational temperatures of CH3OH are derived in five IM sources and found to be similar to those of HC5N. Conclusions. The rotational temperatures of HC5N around the three IM protostars are very similar to those around low- and high-mass protostars. These results indicate that carbon-chain molecules are formed in lukewarm gas (~20-30 K) around IM protostars via the warm carbon-chain chemistry process. Thus, carbon-chain formation occurs ubiquitously in the warm gas around protostars across a wide range of stellar masses. Carbon-chain molecules and COMs coexist around most of the target IM protostars, which is similar to the situation for low- and high-mass protostars. In summary, the chemical characteristics around protostars are the same in the low-, intermediate- and high-mass regimes.

Stars: formation

Astrochemistry

Author

Kotomi Taniguchi

National Astronomical Observatory of Japan

Prasanta Gorai

University of Oslo

Jonathan Tan

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment

University of Virginia

M. Gómez Garrido

Spanish National Observatory (OAN)

R. Fedriani

Institute of Astrophysics of Andalusia (IAA)

Yao-Lun Yang

RIKEN

Sridharan Tirupati Kumara

National Radio Astronomy Observatory

Kei E.I. Tanaka

Institute of Science Tokyo

Masao Saito

The Graduate University for Advanced Studies (SOKENDAI)

National Astronomical Observatory of Japan

Yichen Zhang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

Larry Morgan

Green Bank Observatory

Giuliana Cosentino

European Southern Observatory (ESO)

Chi-Yan Law

Arcetri Astrophysical Observatory

Astronomy and Astrophysics

0004-6361 (ISSN) 1432-0746 (eISSN)

Vol. 692 A65

Massive Star Formation through the Universe (MSTAR)

European Commission (EC) (EC/H2020/788829), 2018-09-01 -- 2023-08-31.

Subject Categories

Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences

Astronomy, Astrophysics and Cosmology

Geochemistry

DOI

10.1051/0004-6361/202451499

More information

Latest update

12/17/2024