First detection of interstellar S2H
Abstract
We present the first detection of gas phase S2H in the Horsehead, a moderately UV-irradiated nebula. This confirms the presence of doubly sulfuretted species in the interstellar medium and opens a new challenge for sulfur chemistry. The observed S2H abundance is ~5x10, only a factor 4-6 lower than that of the widespread H2S molecule. H2S and S2H are efficiently formed on the UV-irradiated icy grain mantles. We performed ice irradiation experiments to determine the H2S and S2H photodesorption yields. The obtained values are ~1.2x10 and <1x10 molecules per incident photon for H2S and S2H, respectively. Our upper limit to the S2H photodesorption yield suggests that photo-desorption is not a competitive mechanism to release the S2H molecules to the gas phase. Other desorption mechanisms such as chemical desorption, cosmic-ray desorption and grain shattering can increase the gaseous S2H abundance to some extent. Alternatively, S2H can be formed via gas phase reactions involving gaseous H2S and the abundant ions S+ and SH+. The detection of S2H in this nebula could be therefore the result of the coexistence of an active grain surface chemistry and gaseous photo-chemistry.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1712.03036,
title = {First detection of interstellar S2H},
author = {Asunción Fuente and Javier R. Goicoechea and Jerome Pety and Romane Le Gal and Rafael Martín-Doménech and Pierre Gratier and Viviana Guzmán and Evelyne Roueff and Jean Christophe Loison and Guillermo M. Muñoz-Caro and Valentine Wakelam and Maryvonne Gerin and Pablo Riviere-Marichalar and Thomas Vidal},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1712.03036},
year = {2017}
}
Comments
8 pages, 2 figures. Astrophysical Journal Letter, in press