Astronomical identification of CN-, the smallest observed molecular anion * **

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Abstract

We present the first astronomical detection of a diatomic negative ion, the cyanide anion CN-, and quantum mechanical calculations of the excitation of this anion by means of collisions with para-H2. The anion CN- is identified by observing the J = 2-1 and J = 3-2 rotational transitions in the C-star envelope IRC +10216 with the IRAM 30-m telescope. The U-shaped line profiles indicate that CN-, like the large anion C6H-, is formed in the outer regions of the envelope. Chemical and excitation model calculations suggest that this species forms from the reaction of large carbon anions with N atoms, rather than from the radiative attachment of an electron to CN, as is the case for large molecular anions. The unexpectedly high abundance derived for CN-, 0.25% relative to CN, indicates that its detection in other astronomical sources is likely. A parallel search for the small anion C2H- remains inconclusive, despite the previous tentative identification of the J = 1-0 rotational transition. The abundance of C2H- in IRC +10216 is found to be vanishingly small, <0.0014% relative to C2H. © 2010 ESO.

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Agúndez, M., Cernicharo, J., Guélin, M., Kahane, C., Roueff, E., Kłos, J., … Thaddeus, P. (2010). Astronomical identification of CN-, the smallest observed molecular anion * **. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 517(5). https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201015186

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