The Organic Refractory
Material in the Diffuse Interstellar Medium: Mid-IR Spectroscopic Constraints
Yvonne J. Pendleton (NASA
Ames)
Louis J. Allamandola
(NASA Ames)
Through an analysis of the
4000 to 1000 cm-1 (2.5 to 10 micron) region of the
spectrum of diffuse interstellar
medium (DISM) dust compared with the spectra of thirteen laboratory produced
chemical candidates which serve as analogs to the interstellar material, we
have found that the organic refractory material in the diffuse interstellar
medium is predominantly hydrocarbon in nature, possessing little nitrogen or
oxygen, with the carbon distributed between the aromatic and aliphatic forms.
Long alkane chains H3C-(CH2)n- with n much
greater than 4 or 5 are not major constituents of this material.
Spectral analysis of the
DISM allows us to place significant constraints on the likelihood of the proposed
materials to be present in the diffuse interstellar medium. The spectra of candidate
materials are evaluated using four spectral characteristics based on the interstellar
data. Comparisons to laboratory analogs indicate the DISM organic material resembles
plasma processed pure hydrocarbon residues much more so than energetically processed
ice residues, which were previously thought to be relevant analogs. This result
is consistent with a birthsite for the carrier of the 3.4 micron band in the
outflow region of evolved carbon stars, rather than in the icy mantles of dense
cloud dust.
The organic signatures of
extragalactic dust, carbonaceous chondritic material, and E. coli bacteria have
also been compared because these have been discussed in the literature as relevant
to the diffuse interstellar medium. The organic material extracted from the
Murchison carbonaceous meteorite and the spectrum of E. coli bacteria reveal
spectral features in the 5-10 micron region that are absent in the DISM. Although
the presence of unaltered circumstellar components in the Murchison meteorite
has been established through several lines of evidence, it is unclear whether
or not the aliphatic component which gives rise to the 3.4 micron band is in
that category. Considering the complete 2-10 micron wavelength region, there
is no spectral evidence for a biological origin of the 3.4 micron interstellar
absorption band. The similarity of the aliphatic CH stretch region of dust from
our own galaxy compared with that of distant galaxies suggests that the organic
component of the ISM is widespread and may be an important universal reservoir
of prebiotic organic carbon.