Survival of the brightest: radiative stabilization of interstellar polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
ORAL
Abstract
Using the DESIREE cryogenic electrostatic ion-beam storage ring, we have investigated the stability against unimolecular dissociation of the vibrationally hot cations of 1-cyano-naphthalene, naphthalene and its isomer azulene, indene and its primary degradation product indenyl C9H7, and 2-cyano-indene. These measurements reveal the rates and mechanisms of radiative cooling of these cations, which are key intermediates in the destruction pathways posited by astrochemical models. Most of these ions are radiatively stabilized by Recurrent Fluorescence (RF), the emission of optical photons from thermally excited electronic states. Radiative stabilization by RF closes some of the destruction channels included in astrochemical models, helping to rationalize their underprediction of observed abundances. Consideration of symmetry breaking and vibronic coupling are essential to explaining the measured RF rates. Measurements of the distributions of kinetic energy released in the dissociation provide detailed information on the reactions’ potential energy surfaces.
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Presenters
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Mark Hugo Stockett
Stockholm Univ
Authors
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Mark Hugo Stockett
Stockholm Univ
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Eleanor K Ashworth
University of East Anglia
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James N Bull
University of East Anglia
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Andy Cammidge
University of East Anglia
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Isabelle Fernandes
University of East Anglia
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Henrik Cederquist
Stockholm University
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Jordan Dezalay
Stockholm University
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Diksha Garg
Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY
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Eva Gougoula
Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY
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Suvasthika Indrajith
Stockholm University
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MingChao Ji
Stockholm University
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Jason W. L. Lee
University of Oxford
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Samuel J. P. Marlton
University of Melbourne
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Chang Liu
University of Melbourne
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Paul Martini
Stockholm University
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Jose E Navarro Navarrete
Stockholm Univeristy
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Henning T Schmidt
Stockholm University
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Arun Subramani
Stockholm University
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Henning Zettergren
Stockholm University
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Boxing Zhu
Stockholm University