4.7 Article

Hydrogenated fulleranes and the anomalous microwave emission of the dark cloud LDN 1622

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 368, Issue 4, Pages 1925-1930

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2006.10272.x

Keywords

astrochemistry; ISM : clouds; dust, extinction; ISM : molecules

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We study the rotation rates and electric dipole emission of hydrogenated icosahedral fullerenes under the physical conditions of the dark cloud (DC) LDN 1622. The abundance of fullerenes is estimated by fitting theoretical photoabsorption spectra to the characteristics of the ultraviolet (UV) bump extinction in DCs. The UV bump appears to be well reproduced by a mixture of fullerenes following a size-distribution power law, which gives progressively lower abundances as the radius of the fullerene increases. We infer abundances of the order of 0.2 x 10(-6) n(H (2)) for C-60. A significant fraction of these molecules are expected to be hydrogenated. We compute the electric dipole rotational emission from these fullerene hydrides, taking into account rotational excitation and damping processes. The recent detection of anomalous microwave emission (5-60 GHz) in LDN 1622 by Casassus et al. can be explained as the result of electric dipole radiation from hydrogenated fullerenes. The bulk of the emission (10-30 GHz) appears to be associated with 60-80 carbon atom fulleranes with a degree of hydrogenation of C:H approximate to 3:1. A small contribution (similar to 10 per cent) of these molecules residing in the surrounding cold neutral medium and/or photodissociation region of the cloud is required to fit the high-frequency tail (40-60 GHz) of the emission.

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