4.7 Article

Laboratory and astronomical identification of the negative molecular ion C6H-

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 652, Issue 2, Pages L141-L144

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/510238

Keywords

ISM : molecules; line : identification; molecular data; molecular processes; radio lines : ISM

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The negative molecular ion C6H- has been detected in the radio band in the laboratory and has been identified in the molecular envelope of IRC + 10216 and in the dense molecular cloud TMC-1. The spectroscopic constants derived from laboratory measurements of 17 rotational lines between 8 and 187 GHz are identical to those derived from the astronomical data, establishing unambiguously that C6H- is the carrier of the series of lines with rotational constant 1377 MHz first observed by K. Kawaguchi et al. in IRC + 10216. The column density of C6H- toward both sources is 1%-5% that of neutral C6H. These surprisingly high abundances for a negative ion imply that if other molecular anions are similarly abundant with respect to their neutral counterparts, they may be detectable both in the laboratory at high resolution and in interstellar molecular clouds.

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