Abundances of ethylene oxide and acetaldehyde in hot molecular cloud cores

Publication Date

1998

Journal or Book Title

ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS

Abstract

We have searched for millimetre-wave line emission from ethylene oxide (c-C_2H_4O) and its structural isomer acetaldehyde (CH_3CHO) in 11 molecular clouds using SEST. Ethylene oxide and acetaldehyde were detected through multiple lines in the hot cores NGC 6334F, G327.3-0.6, G31.41+0.31, and G34.3+0.2. Acetaldehyde was also detected towards G10.47+0.03, G322.2+0.6, and Orion 3'N, and one ethylene oxide line was tentatively detected in G10.47+0.03. Column densities and rotational excitation temperatures were derived using a procedure which fits the observed line intensities by finding the minimum chi (2) -value. The resulting rotational excitation temperatures of ethylene oxide and acetaldehyde are in the range 16 - 38 K, indicating that these species are excited in the outer, cooler parts of the hot cores or that the excitation is significantly subthermal. For an assumed source size of 20'', the deduced column densities are (0.6 - 1)*E(14) cm(-2) for ethylene oxide and (2 - 5)*E(14) cm(-2) for acetaldehyde. The fractional abundances with respect to H_2 are X{[c-C_2H_4O]}=(2 - 6)*E(-10) , and X{[CH_3CHO]}=(0.8 - 3)*E(-9) . The ratio X{[CH_3CHO]}/X{[c-C_2H_4O]} varies between 2.6 (NGC 6334F) and 8.5 (G327.3-0.6). We also detected and analysed multiple transitions of CH_3OH, CH_3OCH_3, C_2H_5OH, and HCOOH. The chemical, and possibly evolutionary, states of NGC 6334F, G327.3-0.6, G31.41+0.31, and G34.3+0.2 seem to be very similar.

Comments

The published version is located at http://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1998A&A...337..275N

Pages

275-286

Volume

337

Issue

1

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