Sulphur-Bearing and Complex Organic Molecules in an Infrared Cold Core

Abstract

Since the start of ALMA observatory operation, new and important chemistry of infrared cold core was revealed. Molecular transitions at millimeter range are being used to identify and to characterize these sources. We have investigated the 231 GHz ALMA archive observations of the infrared dark cloud region C9, focusing on the brighter source that we called as IRDC-C9 Main. We report the existence of two sub-structures on the continuum map of this source: a compact bright spot with high chemistry diversity that we labelled as core, and a weaker and extended one, that we labelled as tail. In the core, we have identified lines of the molecules OCS(19-18), 13CS(5-4) and CH3CH2CN, several lines of CH3CHO and the k-ladder emission of 13CH3CN.We report two different temperature regions: while the rotation diagram of CH3CHO indicates a temperature of 25 K, the rotation diagram of 13CH3CN indicates a warmer phase at temperature of 450K. In the tail, only the OCS(19-18) and 13CS(5-4) lines were detected. We used the Nautilus and the Radex codes to estimate the column densities and the abundances. The existence of hot gas in the core of IRDC-C9 Main suggests the presence of a protostar, which is not present in the tail.

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