Literature DB >> 17429551

Rotational spectroscopy of the isotopic species of silicon monosulfide, SiS.

H S P Müller1, M C McCarthy, L Bizzocchi, H Gupta, S Esser, H Lichau, M Caris, F Lewen, J Hahn, C Degli Esposti, S Schlemmer, P Thaddeus.   

Abstract

Pure rotational transitions of silicon monosulfide ((28)Si(32)S) and its rare isotopic species have been observed in their ground as well as vibrationally excited states by employing Fourier transform microwave (FTMW) spectroscopy of a supersonic molecular beam at centimetre wavelengths (13-37 GHz) and by using long-path absorption spectroscopy at millimetre and submillimetre wavelengths (127-925 GHz). The latter measurements include 91 transition frequencies for (28)Si(32)S, (28)Si(33)S, (28)Si(34)S, (29)Si(32)S and (30)Si(32)S in upsilon = 0, as well as 5 lines for (28)Si(32)S in upsilon = 1, with rotational quantum numbers J''< or = 52. The centimetre-wave measurements include more than 300 newly recorded lines. Together with previous data they result in almost 600 transitions (J'' = 0 and 1) from all twelve possible isotopic species, including (29)Si(36)S and (30)Si(36)S, which have fractional abundances of about 7 x 10(-6) and 4.5 x 10(-6), respectively. Rotational transitions were observed from upsilon = 0 for the least abundant isotopic species to as high as upsilon = 51 for the main species. Owing to the high spectral resolution of the FTMW spectrometer, hyperfine structure from the nuclear electric quadrupole moment of (33)S was resolved for species containing this isotope, as was much smaller nuclear spin-rotation splitting for isotopic species involving (29)Si. By combining the measurements here with previously published microwave and infrared data in one global fit, an improved set of spectroscopic parameters for SiS has been derived which include several terms describing the breakdown of the Born-Oppenheimer approximation. With this parameter set, highly accurate rotational frequencies for this important astronomical molecule can now be predicted well into the terahertz region.

Entities:  

Year:  2007        PMID: 17429551     DOI: 10.1039/b618799d

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Chem Chem Phys        ISSN: 1463-9076            Impact factor:   3.676


  4 in total

1.  Building Blocks of Dust: A Coordinated Laboratory and Astronomical Study of AGB Stars.

Authors:  Michael C McCarthy; Carl A Gottlieb; Jose Cernicharo
Journal:  J Mol Spectrosc       Date:  2019-02       Impact factor: 1.507

2.  Study of CS, SiO, and SiS abundances in carbon star envelopes: Assessing their role as gas-phase precursors of dust.

Authors:  S Massalkhi; M Agúndez; J Cernicharo
Journal:  Astron Astrophys       Date:  2019-08-07       Impact factor: 5.802

3.  SI-BEARING MOLECULES TOWARD IRC+10216: ALMA UNVEILS THE MOLECULAR ENVELOPE OF CWLEO.

Authors:  L Velilla Prieto; J Cernicharo; G Quintana-Lacaci; M Agúndez; A Castro-Carrizo; J P Fonfŕia; N Marcelino; J Zúñiga; A Requena; A Bastida; F Lique; M Guélin
Journal:  Astrophys J Lett       Date:  2015-06-01       Impact factor: 7.413

4.  The abundance of S- and Si-bearing molecules in O-rich circumstellar envelopes of AGB stars.

Authors:  S Massalkhi; M Agúndez; J Cernicharo; L Velilla-Prieto
Journal:  Astron Astrophys       Date:  2020-09-09       Impact factor: 5.802

  4 in total

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