Publicación:
Laboratory rotational spectroscopy and interstellar search for the protein precursor 4-oxobutanenitrile (HCOCH2CH2CN)

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Resumen

Understanding the presence and distribution of pre-biotic precursorsin the interstellar medium (ISM)is key to tracing the chemical origins of life. Among them, 4-oxobutanenitrile (HCOCH2CH2CN) has been identified in laboratory simulations as a plausible intermediate in the formation of glutamic acid, a proteinogenic amino acid. Here, we report its gas-phase rotational spectrum, measured using two complementary techniques: chirped-pulse Fourier transform microwave (CP-FTMW) spectroscopy (2– 18 GHz) and free-jet millimetre-wave (FJ−AMMW) absorption spectroscopy (59.6–80 GHz). Quantum chemical calculations revealed nine low-energy conformers, of which the TC conformer was assigned based on the measured spectra. The resulting spectroscopic parameters were used to search for the molecule in the ultradeep spectral survey of the G+0.693-0.027 molecular cloud, located in the Galactic Center. No signal attributable to 4−oxobutanenitrile was detected. A stringent upper limit to its column density was derived (N < 4 ×1012 cm−2), corresponding to a molecular abundance of <2.9 ×10−11 relative to H2. This upper limit lies well below the observed abundances of simpler structurally related species containing −HCO and −CN groups, underscoring the challenge of detecting increasingly complex pre-biotic molecules in the ISM and the need for future, more sensitive astronomical facilities.

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Palabras clave

Molecular data, Astrobiology, Astrochemistry, ISM: abundances, ISM: molecules, Methods: laboratory: molecular

Citación

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 546(1): staf2224 (2026)

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