First interstellar detections of CaS, KS, and KSH in disk G351.77-mm1, with column densities three orders of magnitude below those of SO2, CH3SH, and SiS.
Title resolution pending
4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
representative citing papers
New computed rates for excited S(1D) and SO(1Δ) plus a 1 ppm near-surface atomic sulfur source improve photochemical modeling of sulfur species in Venus and exo-Venus atmospheres.
Water binding energy on silicate grains is twice that on ice, enabling local retention and inheritance for terrestrial planets without outer Solar System delivery.
The pyRate model requires nondiffusive chemistry to form observed S-bearing species in irradiated CO2:CS2 ice but overpredicts OCS, CS and SO while underpredicting SO2 and sulfur allotropes.
citing papers explorer
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A quest for sulfur-bearing refractory species. Identification of CaS in the interstellar medium
First interstellar detections of CaS, KS, and KSH in disk G351.77-mm1, with column densities three orders of magnitude below those of SO2, CH3SH, and SiS.
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A Comprehensive Sulfur Chemistry Network Including Excited S(1D) and SO(1{\Delta}) for the XODIAC Photochemical Model: Accounting for Missing Sulfur Processes in Venus and Exo-Venus Analogs
New computed rates for excited S(1D) and SO(1Δ) plus a 1 ppm near-surface atomic sulfur source improve photochemical modeling of sulfur species in Venus and exo-Venus atmospheres.
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Astrochemical Inheritance of Terrestrial Planets Water from Local Wet Silicates
Water binding energy on silicate grains is twice that on ice, enabling local retention and inheritance for terrestrial planets without outer Solar System delivery.
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Modeling the UV-photon irradiation of CS$_2$-bearing ices in the laboratory with the pyRate gas-grain astrochemical code. New insights into the missing sulfur problem
The pyRate model requires nondiffusive chemistry to form observed S-bearing species in irradiated CO2:CS2 ice but overpredicts OCS, CS and SO while underpredicting SO2 and sulfur allotropes.