Bold takeaway: Detecting complex prebiotic molecules in space remains incredibly challenging, even when scientists precisely map their spectra here on Earth. And this study illustrates that gap clearly.
Interstellar chemistry and the origins of life are deeply intertwined. Among the molecules of interest is 4-oxobutanenitrile (HCOCH2CH2CN), identified in laboratory simulations as a plausible step toward forming glutamic acid, a protein-building amino acid. This work reports the gas-phase rotational spectrum of 4-oxobutanenitrile, measured with two complementary techniques: chirped-pulse Fourier transform microwave spectroscopy (2–18 GHz) and free-jet millimeter-wave absorption spectroscopy (59.6–80 GHz).
Quantum-chemical calculations revealed nine low-energy shapes (conformers) for the molecule. The experimental data allowed researchers to assign the TC conformer to the measured spectra. Using these spectroscopic parameters, they combed an ultradeep spectral survey of the G+0.693-0.027 molecular cloud near the Galactic Center to look for the molecule in space.
No evidence of 4-oxobutanenitrile appeared in the data. The team established a stringent upper limit on its column density, N < 4 × 10^12 cm^-2, which translates to a molecular abundance of < 2.9 × 10^-11 relative to molecular hydrogen (H2).
This upper limit sits well below the abundances of simpler molecules that share related functional groups (–HCO and –CN), highlighting how, as molecular complexity grows, detecting such prebiotic species in the interstellar medium becomes markedly more difficult. The result underscores the need for future astronomical facilities with greater sensitivity to probe these richer chemistries.
Authors: V. M. Rivilla; E. R. Alonso; W. Song; A. Insausti; A. Maris; F. J. Basterretxea; S. Melandri; I. Jiménez-Serra; E. J. Cocinero.
Notes: Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. This work falls within the domains of Astrophysics of Galaxies and related astrochemical and astrobiology research. The arXiv citation is arXiv:2512.11500 (v1), with the DOI link available at https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2512.11500.
Discussion prompts: Does this study strengthen or weaken the case for interstellar formation pathways toward amino acids? How might upcoming observational facilities change the odds of detecting such complex organics in space? What alternative explanations could account for the nondetection despite laboratory plausibility? Would you agree that the field should prioritize sensitivity improvements over focusing on even more complex species at this stage, or should it pursue both directions in parallel?