Protonated hydrogen cyanide as a tracer of pristine molecular gas

Abstract

Protonated hydrogen cyanide, HCNH+, plays a fundamental role in astrochemistry because it is an intermediary in gas-phase ion-neutral reactions within cold molecular clouds. However, the impact of the environment on the chemistry of HCNH+ remains poorly understood. With the IRAM-30 m and APEX-12 m observations, we report the first robust distribution of HCNH+ in the Serpens filament and in Serpens South. Our data suggest that HCNH+ is abundant in cold and quiescent regions, but is deficit in active star-forming regions. The observed HCNH+ fractional abundances relative to H2 range from 3.1× 10-11 in protostellar cores to 5.9× 10-10 in prestellar cores, and the HCNH+ abundance generally decreases with increasing H2 column density, which suggests that HCNH+ coevolves with cloud cores. Our observations and modeling results suggest that the abundance of HCNH+ in cold molecular clouds is strongly dependent on the H2 number density. The decrease in the abundance of HCNH+ is caused by the fact that its main precursors (e.g., HCN and HNC) undergo freeze-out as the number density of H2 increases. However, current chemical models cannot explain other observed trends, such as the fact that the abundance of HCNH+ shows an anti-correlation with that of HCN and HNC, but a positive correlation with that of N2H+ in the southern part of the Serpens South northern clump. This indicates that additional chemical pathways have to be invoked for the formation of HCNH+ via molecules like N2 in regions in which HCN and HNC freeze out. Both the fact that HCNH+ is most abundant in molecular cores prior to gravitational collapse and the fact that low-J HCNH+ transitions have very low H2 critical densities make this molecular ion an excellent probe of pristine molecular gas.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…