SIMBAD references

2021ApJ...909..123M - Astrophys. J., 909, 123-123 (2021/March-2)

2-aminooxazole in astrophysical environments: IR spectra and destruction cross sections for energetic processing.

MATE B., CARRASCO-HERRERA R., TIMON V., TANARRO I., HERRERO V.J., CARRASCOSA H., MUNOZ CARO G.M., GONZALEZ-DIAZ C. and JIMENEZ-SERRA I.

Abstract (from CDS):

2-aminooxazole (2AO), a N-heterocyclic molecule, has been proposed as an intermediate in prebiotic syntheses. It has been demonstrated that it can be synthesized from small molecules such as cyanamide and glycoaldehyde, which are present in interstellar space. The aim of this work is to provide infrared (IR) spectra, in the solid phase for conditions typical of astrophysical environments and to estimate its stability toward UV photons and cosmic rays. IR (4000-600 cm–1) absorption spectra at 20 K, 180 K, and 300 K, IR band strengths, and room-temperature UV (120-250 nm) absorption spectra are given for the first time for this species. Destruction cross sections of ≃9.5 10–18 cm2 and ≃2 10–16 cm2 were found in the irradiation at 20 K of pure 2AO and 2AO:H2O ices with UV (6.3-10.9 eV) photons or 5 keV electrons, respectively. These data were used to estimate half-life times for the molecule in different environments. It is estimated that 2AO could survive UV radiation and cosmic rays in the ice mantles of dense clouds beyond cloud collapse. In contrast, it would be very unstable on the surface of cold solar system bodies like Kuiper Belt objects, but the molecule could still survive within dust grain agglomerates or cometesimals.

Abstract Copyright: © 2021. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): Pre-biotic astrochemistry - Astrochemistry - Ice destruction - Molecular physics - Molecule destruction - Spectral line identification - Laboratory astrophysics - Theoretical models - Experimental techniques

Simbad objects: 2

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:2021ApJ...909..123M and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu