ArXiv TLDR

Aromatic rings in the Central Molecular Zone: Benzonitrile

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2604.24510

V. M. Rivilla, D. San Andrés, M. Sanz-Novo, L. Colzi, I. Jiménez-Serra + 10 more

astro-ph.GA

TLDR

Benzonitrile, an aromatic molecule, is newly detected in warmer Central Molecular Zone clouds, confirming its widespread presence and stability in harsh environments.

Key contributions

  • Detected benzonitrile in two warmer Central Molecular Zone (CMZ) clouds using ultra-deep Yebes 40m surveys.
  • Derived abundances consistent with cold clouds, but found a lower HC7N/benzonitrile ratio in the CMZ.
  • Confirms benzonitrile's widespread presence and survival in harsh environments like high temperatures and shocks.
  • Suggests aromatics are stable, abundant, and significantly contribute to the interstellar carbon budget.

Why it matters

This research significantly expands our understanding of aromatic molecule distribution and stability in diverse interstellar environments. It challenges previous chemical models and supports a top-down formation scenario for these crucial carbon-bearing species, highlighting their importance in the interstellar carbon budget.

Original Abstract

In recent years, several aromatic molecules (benzene-based rings) have been detected in the cold molecular cloud TMC-1, with its CN-derivative, benzonitrile (c-C$_6$H$_5$CN), also identified in other nearby cold sources. However, observed abundances differ significantly from chemical model predictions, indicating an incomplete understanding of its chemistry and motivating searches in distinct environments. We report new detections of benzonitrile in two warmer molecular clouds of the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ): G+0.693-0.027 and G+0.633-0.0604. Using Yebes 40m ultra-deep surveys in the 31--50 GHz range, we performed LTE and non-LTE analyses to derive the physical parameters of the emission. We obtain column densities of $N$=(7.4$\pm$0.5)$\times10^{12}$ and (2.60$\pm$0.13)$\times10^{12}$ cm$^{-2}$, corresponding to abundances relative to H$_2$ of (6$\pm$1)$\times10^{-11}$ and (4.3$\pm$0.9)$\times10^{-11}$, consistent with values in cold Galactic clouds. The HC$_7$N/benzonitrile ratio is lower (2.15-2.4) than in colder sources (4.5-30), suggesting environmental effects and a relative enhancement of aromatic chemistry in the CMZ. These results confirm that benzonitrile is widespread and can survive in harsher environments (e.g., high temperatures, shocks, enhanced cosmic-ray ionization) than those in Galactic cold clouds. This suggests that aromatics are stable and abundant species that can significantly contribute to the total budget of interstellar carbon in molecular clouds. A top-down formation scenario, involving fragmentation of larger carbonaceous species, is consistent with the nearly constant abundances observed with molecular size.

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