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Methane, ethylene, and acetylene ices were irradiated in a ultra-high vacuum vessel between 10 K and 50 K with 7.3 MeV protons as well as 9.0 MeV He2+ nuclei to simulate the interaction of galactic cosmic-ray particles with extraterrestrial, organic ices and to elucidate a mechanistic model to synthesize experimentally detected polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). Theoretical calculations center on computer simulations of ion-induced collision cascades in irradiated methane targets. MeV ions induce hydrogen and carbon knock-on particles in elastic encounters with the target atoms. Each primary knock-on triggers one collision cascade with up to 70 suprathermal carbon atoms concentrated in one to two subcascades in 0.6-5 × 103 Å3. At the end point of each single trajectory, every suprathermal carbon atom can form an individual reaction center of hydrogen abstraction and insertion in or addition to chemical bonds of a reactant molecule. In the relaxation phase of this energized volume, overlapping reaction zones likely form observed PAHs napthalene, phenanthrene/azulene, and coronene. This multicenter mechanism establishes a versatile route to synthesize complex molecules in extraterrestrial ices even at temperatures as low as 10 K within cosmic-ray-initiated single collision cascades.
Kaiser et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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