Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Investigating Prebiotic Organic Chemistry using Broadband Centimeter Spectral Line Surveys Anthony J. Remijan Associate Scientist – NRAO Division Head – NRAO Scientific User Support Services [email protected] 1 A Hodgepodge of Surveys (just Orion!): • 34-50, 83.5-84.5, 86-91 GHz Ohishi et at. 1986 • 47, 87 GHz Madden et al. 1989 • 70-115 GHz Turner 1991 • 86 GHz Plambeck et al. 1982 • 87-108 GHz Friedel et al. 2003 • 98 GHz Murata et al 1992 • 138-151 GHz Lee et al. 2001 • 150-160 GHz Ziurys and McGonagle 1993 • 160-165 GHz Lee et al. 2002 • 172-256 GHz Dickens et al. 1997 • 190-900GHz (with gaps) Serabyn et al. 1995 • 225-262 GHz Liu, S.-Y. et al. 2002 • 215-263 GHz Sutton et al. 1985; Blake et al. 1987 • 325-360GHz Schilke et al. 1997 • 334-343 GHz Sutton et al. 1995 • 455-507 GHz White et al. 2003 • 486-492 and 541-577 GHz Persson et al. 2007 • 607-725GHz Schilke et al. 2001 • 795-903GHz Comito et al. 2005 • 795-903 GHz Comito et al. 2005 • Etc… • Etc… A complete survey with HIFI/PACS Investigate chemical and physical conditions toward Orion ALMA Orion Band 6 Survey (214-246GHz) NOTE: Not many at cm wavelengths! 2 A Spectral-Line Survey Observation of IRC +10216 between 28 and 50 GHz (Kawaguchi et al. 1995) Full spectral scan 188 features detected 150 features identified to 22 molecular species. 38 unidentified features including the “B1377” Laboratory and Astronomical Identification of the Negative Molecular Ion C6H(McCarthy et al. 2006) Confirmed the molecule both in IRC+10216 but also in TMC-1 Went on to detect several other molecular ions including C8H-, C4H-, CN- and C3N- Original Survey data from Kawaguchi et al. 1995) 3 Why waste our time in the cm? 1) building up the chemical inventory of astronomical molecules is important to understand how organic matter is produced in interstellar space 2) thorough, sensitive survey will allow scientists to utilize these databases to make firm, multitransition identifications of species 3) surveys are not only to discover new interstellar species but also provide probes of physical, kinematic and chemical conditions in astronomical environments Most of the “most favorable” transitions should be in mm Certainly many more transitions To select from… BUT Major line confusion problem and What if the transitions are not in LTE? 4 The Green Bank Telescope l θB = 740”/ν [GHz] l 7854 m2 - ~2 ACRES! l l l l l l At 17 million pounds, it is one of the largest moving structures on land! OFF(2 min)-ON(2 min) Toward Sgr, use 4x200 MHz windows for a spectral resolution of ~24.4 kHz These limitations should disappear with the new spectrometer. The GBT has been instrumental in searching for large, organic and prebiotic species. 11 17! new species have been detected since 2004 PRebiotic Interstellar MOlecular Survey • Target: Sgr B2(N-LMH) • Coverage: 40.4 GHz of Bandwidth from 300 MHz - 50 GHz • Noise level of ~2 mK • Publicly available with no proprietary period http://www.cv.nrao.edu/~aremijan/SLiSE/ Jan M. Hollis, Anthony J. Remijan, Philip R. Jewell, Frank J. Lovas, Joanna F. Corby www.cv.nrao.edu/~aremijan/PRIMOS/ Ballpark number of available lines for SKA mid up to 13500 MHz 7 (Some) New Molecule Detections propanal propenal cyanoformaldehyde ketenimine ethanimine carbodiimide acetamide methylisocyanate methyltriacetylene cyclopropenone Ethanimine § CH3CHNH has two stereoisomers, E (μa=0.834, μb=1.882) and Z (μa=2.446, μb=0) § Microwave spectra first taken by Frank Lovas in 1980, then RD Brown in 1981 § -CH3 rotamer yields A-E splitting, assisting in interstellar detection Lovas, F. J. (1980). J. Chem. Phys., 72(9), 4964-4972 Interstellar Detection and Analysis • The detection of ethanimine is significant because of its possible role in the formation of alanine . • In this mechanism for amino acid formation, the key step is the formation of a primary aldimine that can be co-deposited in the interstellar ice with HCN to permit subsequent formation of the aminonitrile precursor. • As such, aminonitriles may serve as a reservoir species. For the formation of the simplest amino acid, glycine, interstellar production of the two key species (methanimine and aminoacetonitrile) has been confirmed (Godfrey 1973, Belloche et al. 2008) Interstellar spectra from GBT PRIMOS survey; A species hyperfine fiducials shown in blue, E species hyperfine fiducials shown in red Loomis, et al. 2013, ApJL, 765, L10 E-Cyanomethanimine Zaleski et al. 2013 ApJ, 765, L9 • Precursor to prebiotic oligomers of HCN • Formation of adenine using only addition of HCN • Adenine is a nucleobase with a variety of roles in organic chemistry including cellular respiration. • energy-rich adenosine triphosphate (ATP) • Protein synthesis, as a chemical component of DNA and RNA Carbodiimide (HNCNH) ~2 x 1014 cm-2 (Turner et al. 1975) ~2 x 1013 cm-2 In water ice ~4% @ 80 K ~13% @140 K +4 kcal mol-1 ~2000 K ~1% @ 300 K McGuire et al. 2012, ApJ, 758, L33 Duvernay et al., 2004 J. Am. Chem. Soc., 126, 7772. Duvernay et al., 2005, J. Phys. Chem. A., 109, 603. Carbodiimide - observations Lines at 4 GHz +64 and +82 km s-1 +64 and +82 km s-1 CH3OH Line H Recomb Line CH3OH Line No lines! CH3OH Line +64 km s-1 Without any other observations, there is a 0.002% chance we are wrong with just the 4GHz transitions. Carbodiimide - energy level structure 4.8 GHz Maser Line -log(Aij) ~ 2.5 -log(Aij) ~ 2.5 -log(Aij) ~ 9.0 J = 18 J = 17 J = 19 J = 16 J = 18 ~ 0.75 1.5 THz 𝚫J = 0, ±1 𝚫K Ka = ±1 J = 18 J = 17 J = 16 Ka = 0 Ka = 1 Ka = 2 Carbodiimide - energy level structure J = 16 36.6 GHz Line -log(Aij) ~ 2.5 -log(Aij) ~ 2.5 -log(Aij) ~ 6.3 J = 15 J = 14 J = 17 J = 16 J = 15 𝚫J = 0, ±1 𝚫K Ka = ±1 J = 16 J = 14 Ka = 0 J = 17 Ka = 1 Ka = 2 Carbodiimide - analysis Transition Population Inversion? TA* (mK) Observed TA* (mK) (2 x 1013 cm-2) TA* (mK) (5 x 1014 cm-2) 4 GHz Yes 85 0.1 3.8 15 GHz No - - - 25 GHz Yes 27 0.8 23 36 GHz No < 11 1.4 39 45 GHz Yes 25 0.9 25 Emission arising from a thermal population of HNCNH would be undetectable in (any?) survey Methyl Formate Maser Emission These results are in sharp contrast with interferometric observations showing that HCOOCH3 resides predominantly in the compact (6.5") LMH hot core near Sgr B2(N) (Miao et al. 1995). This source is indeed characterized by very high densities (> 107 cm-3) and gas temperatures (>100 K). Assuming a source size of 4“ and a rotational temperature of 80 K, a column density of 4.5x1017 cm-2 (Belloche et al. 2009, 2013) Methyl Formate Maser Emission The conclusion is that all detected methyl formate lines below 30 GHz are masers! Q. What mechanisms are pumping these new masers? A. Can mapping the distribution give insight to excitation and possible formation? Where do the cm emission/absorption features come from? 20 Where do the cm emission/absorption features come from? 21 Conclusions Centimeter-wave observations are a powerful tool for the identification of new molecules At least 1-2 new molecule detections a year come from PRIMOS for the last 7 years Low line density makes definitive detections possible with fewer lines Non-LTE emission can enable detection of otherwise undetectable species So what do we want: • Large spectral bandwidth with possible microJansky spectral line sensitivity… hit mJy RMS with the GBT for some methyl formate transitions but still could not be detected. Helps to greatly constrain physical conditions! • Discovery space will be vast for complex organic molecules (COMs) because there will be maser type transitions for a myriad of prebiotic molecules. We just need to fully characterize the energy level diagrams for these species of interest…may also be able to start detecting COMs in disks. • High spatial resolution observations to locate and characterize the distribution of these molecular species in order to again, characterize the physical environment and to possible ascertain chemical formation pathways. • Investigate these molecules in a myriad of sources. No need to continue to look at the “best and the brightest” sources in the sky. This will help us to better understand the chemistry from the ISM to planetary systems. 23