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Radio astronomy interstellar molecule detection

The existence of molecular species in interstellar space has been known for almost seventy years. The first observations involved the electronic spectra, seen in absorption in the near-ultraviolet, of the CN, CH [28] and CH+ [29] species. Radiofrequency lines due to hydrogen atoms in emission [30] and absorption [31], and from the recombination of H+ ions with electrons were also known. However, molecular radio astronomy started with the observation of the OH radical by Weinreb, Barrett, Meeks and Henry [32] in 1963 in due course, this was followed by the discovery of CO [33]. In the subsequent years over 110 molecules have been observed in a variety of astronomical sources, including some in galaxies other than our own. Nearly a third of these are diatomic molecules, with both closed and open shell electronic ground states, and some were observed by astronomers prior to being detected in the laboratory. [Pg.713]

We have already discussed the high-resolution spectroscopy of the OH radical at some length. It occupies a special place in the history of the subject, being the first short-lived free radical to be detected and studied in the laboratory by microwave spectroscopy. The details of the experiment by Dousmanis, Sanders and Townes [4] were described in section 10.1. It was also the first interstellar molecule to be detected by radio-astronomy. In chapter 8 we described the molecular beam electric resonance studies of yl-doubling transitions in the lowest rotational levels, and in chapter 9 we gave a comprehensive discussion of the microwave and far-infrared magnetic resonance spectra of OH. Our quantitative analysis of the magnetic resonance spectra made use of the results of pure field-free microwave studies of the rotational transitions, which we now describe. [Pg.788]


See other pages where Radio astronomy interstellar molecule detection is mentioned: [Pg.81]    [Pg.324]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.355]    [Pg.79]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.97]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.408]    [Pg.193]    [Pg.57]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.81 ]




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Astronomy

Interstellar

Molecule detection

Radio astronomy

Radio astronomy interstellar molecules

Radio, radios

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