scholarly journals PROBING THE CARBON–PHOSPHORUS BOND COUPLING IN LOW-TEMPERATURE PHOSPHINE (PH3)–METHANE (CH4) INTERSTELLAR ICE ANALOGUES

2016 ◽  
Vol 819 (2) ◽  
pp. 97 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew M. Turner ◽  
Matthew J. Abplanalp ◽  
Ralf I. Kaiser
Cryobiology ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 370
Author(s):  
A. Kouchi ◽  
Y. Oba ◽  
N. Miyauchi ◽  
H. Hidaka ◽  
N. Watanabe

2018 ◽  
Vol 20 (13) ◽  
pp. 8753-8764 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric Michoulier ◽  
Jennifer A. Noble ◽  
Aude Simon ◽  
Joëlle Mascetti ◽  
Céline Toubin

The present work represents a complete description of PAH–ice interaction in the ground electronic state and at low temperature, providing the binding energies and barrier heights necessary to the ongoing improvement of astrochemical models.


2012 ◽  
Vol 549 ◽  
pp. A40 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Vinogradoff ◽  
F. Duvernay ◽  
G. Danger ◽  
P. Theulé ◽  
F. Borget ◽  
...  

1980 ◽  
Vol 87 ◽  
pp. 387-388
Author(s):  
W. Hagen ◽  
A.G.G.M. Tielens ◽  
J. M. Greenberg

The near-infrared spectrum of many sources associated with molecular clouds shows a broad absorption feature at 3.08 μm (e.g. Merrill et al., 1976; Harris et al., 1978). This feature has usually been attributed to absorption by H2O ice frozen on grains, but it has been impossible to satisfactorily reproduce the observed band shape (Merrill et al., 1976; Mukai et al., 1978). We have been able to obtain a complete fit of this absorption feature in the laboratory using very low temperature mixtures of H2O with other polar molecules. The preparation of these interstellar dust grain-mantle analogs has been described elsewhere (Greenberg, 1979; Hagen et al., 1979). They are prepared by allowing a gas mixture of simple molecules (e.g. CO, H2O, NH3, CH4 etc.) to condense on a low temperature (10 K) substrate. This frozen mixture can be heated and recooled. The samples are analyzed with an infrared spectrometer.


2014 ◽  
Vol 16 (43) ◽  
pp. 23604-23615 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Noble ◽  
P. Theule ◽  
F. Duvernay ◽  
G. Danger ◽  
T. Chiavassa ◽  
...  

Ammonia and carbon dioxide play an important role in both atmospheric and interstellar ice chemistries.


1997 ◽  
Vol 161 ◽  
pp. 23-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louis J. Allamandola ◽  
Max P. Bernstein ◽  
Scott A. Sandford

AbstractInfrared observations, combined with realistic laboratory simulations, have revolutionized our understanding of interstellar ice and dust, the building blocks of comets. Since comets are thought to be a major source of the volatiles on the primative earth, their organic inventory is of central importance to questions concerning the origin of life. Ices in molecular clouds contain the very simple molecules H2O, CH3OH, CO, CO2, CH4, H2, and probably some NH3and H2CO, as well as more complex species including nitriles, ketones, and esters. The evidence for these, as well as carbonrich materials such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), microdiamonds, and amorphous carbon is briefly reviewed. This is followed by a detailed summary of interstellar/precometary ice photochemical evolution based on laboratory studies of realistic polar ice analogs. Ultraviolet photolysis of these ices produces H2, H2CO, CO2, CO, CH4, HCO, and the moderately complex organic molecules: CH3CH2OH (ethanol), HC(= O)NH2(formamide), CH3C(= O)NH2(acetamide), R-CN (nitriles), and hexamethylenetetramine (HMT, C6H12N4), as well as more complex species including polyoxymethylene and related species (POMs), amides, and ketones. The ready formation of these organic species from simple starting mixtures, the ice chemistry that ensues when these ices are mildly warmed, plus the observation that the more complex refractory photoproducts show lipid-like behavior and readily self organize into droplets upon exposure to liquid water suggest that comets may have played an important role in the origin of life.


Author(s):  
P.P.K. Smith

Grains of pigeonite, a calcium-poor silicate mineral of the pyroxene group, from the Whin Sill dolerite have been ion-thinned and examined by TEM. The pigeonite is strongly zoned chemically from the composition Wo8En64FS28 in the core to Wo13En34FS53 at the rim. Two phase transformations have occurred during the cooling of this pigeonite:- exsolution of augite, a more calcic pyroxene, and inversion of the pigeonite from the high- temperature C face-centred form to the low-temperature primitive form, with the formation of antiphase boundaries (APB's). Different sequences of these exsolution and inversion reactions, together with different nucleation mechanisms of the augite, have created three distinct microstructures depending on the position in the grain.In the core of the grains small platelets of augite about 0.02μm thick have farmed parallel to the (001) plane (Fig. 1). These are thought to have exsolved by homogeneous nucleation. Subsequently the inversion of the pigeonite has led to the creation of APB's.


Author(s):  
S. Edith Taylor ◽  
Patrick Echlin ◽  
May McKoon ◽  
Thomas L. Hayes

Low temperature x-ray microanalysis (LTXM) of solid biological materials has been documented for Lemna minor L. root tips. This discussion will be limited to a demonstration of LTXM for measuring relative elemental distributions of P,S,Cl and K species within whole cells of tobacco leaves.Mature Wisconsin-38 tobacco was grown in the greenhouse at the University of California, Berkeley and picked daily from the mid-stalk position (leaf #9). The tissue was excised from the right of the mid rib and rapidly frozen in liquid nitrogen slush. It was then placed into an Amray biochamber and maintained at 103K. Fracture faces of the tissue were prepared and carbon-coated in the biochamber. The prepared sample was transferred from the biochamber to the Amray 1000A SEM equipped with a cold stage to maintain low temperatures at 103K. Analyses were performed using a tungsten source with accelerating voltages of 17.5 to 20 KV and beam currents from 1-2nA.


Author(s):  
P. Echlin ◽  
M. McKoon ◽  
E.S. Taylor ◽  
C.E. Thomas ◽  
K.L. Maloney ◽  
...  

Although sections of frozen salt solutions have been used as standards for x-ray microanalysis, such solutions are less useful when analysed in the bulk form. They are poor thermal and electrical conductors and severe phase separation occurs during the cooling process. Following a suggestion by Whitecross et al we have made up a series of salt solutions containing a small amount of graphite to improve the sample conductivity. In addition, we have incorporated a polymer to ensure the formation of microcrystalline ice and a consequent homogenity of salt dispersion within the frozen matrix. The mixtures have been used to standardize the analytical procedures applied to frozen hydrated bulk specimens based on the peak/background analytical method and to measure the absolute concentration of elements in developing roots.


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