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  5. Role of Low-Energy (<20 eV) Secondary Electrons in the Extraterrestrial Synthesis of Prebiotic Molecules
 

Role of Low-Energy (<20 eV) Secondary Electrons in the Extraterrestrial Synthesis of Prebiotic Molecules

Journal
ACS EARTH AND SPACE CHEMISTRY  
Date Issued
2024
Author(s)
Wu, Qin Tong
•
Anderson, Hannah
•
Watkins, Aurland K.
•
Arora, Devyani
•
Barnes, Kennedy
•
PADOVANI, Marco  
•
Shingledecker, Christopher N.
•
Arumainayagam, Christopher R.
•
Battat, James B.R.
DOI
10.1021/acsearthspacechem.3c00259
Abstract
We demonstrate for the first time that Galactic cosmic rays with energies as high as ∼1010 eV can trigger a cascade of low-energy (<20 eV) secondary electrons that could be a significant contributor to the interstellar synthesis of prebiotic molecules whose delivery by comets, meteorites, and interplanetary dust particles may have kick-started life on Earth. For the energetic processing of interstellar ice mantles inside dark, dense molecular clouds, we explore the relative importance of low-energy (<20 eV) secondary electrons─agents of radiation chemistry─and low-energy (<10 eV), nonionizing photons─instigators of photochemistry. Our calculations indicate fluxes of ∼102 electrons cm-2 s-1 for low-energy secondary electrons produced within interstellar ices due to attenuated Galactic cosmic-ray protons. Consequently, in certain star-forming regions where internal high-energy radiation sources produce ionization rates that are observed to be a thousand times greater than the typical interstellar Galactic ionization rate, the flux of low-energy secondary electrons should far exceed that of nonionizing photons. Because reaction cross sections can be several orders of magnitude larger for electrons than for photons, even in the absence of such enhancement, our calculations indicate that secondary low-energy (<20 eV) electrons are at least as significant as low-energy (<10 eV) nonionizing photons in the interstellar synthesis of prebiotic molecules. Most importantly, our results demonstrate the pressing need for explicitly incorporating low-energy electrons in current and future astrochemical simulations of cosmic ices. Such models are critically important for interpreting James Webb Space Telescope infrared measurements, which are currently being used to probe the origins of life by studying complex organic molecules found in ices near star-forming regions.
Volume
8
Issue
1
Start page
79
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12386/34799
Url
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsearthspacechem.3c00259
https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85181065116
Issn Identifier
2472-3452
Rights
open.access
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