2024 Impact factor 2.2
Soft Matter and Biological Physics

EPJ D Roadmap - Roadmap on carbon molecular nanostructures in space

Artist’s impression of fullerenes and small graphene fragments found in a planetary nebula. Credit: IAC Multimedia Service. Original image of the planetary nebula Dumbbell-M27 (Daniel López - IAC).

A new Roadmap is published in EPJD

The roadmap on carbon molecular nanostructures in space contains forty contributions from leading scientists in observational astronomy, laboratory astrophysics/chemistry, spectroscopy, theoretical chemistry, astrobiology, molecular reaction dynamics, graph theory and materials science. It highlights a rapidly developing, interdisciplinary field of research that is benefiting from recent technical advances in both observational astronomy and laboratory infrastructure combined with new powerful machine learning approaches to data analysis and modelling. The rapidly expanding inventory of carbon molecular nanostructures found in space is opening up many fundamental questions concerning their origin, astrochemical relevance and significance for the origin of life. The roadmap documents the state-of-the-art in observational and laboratory studies along with the current theoretical and experimental challenges to be overcome in order to achieve a greater understanding of the physics and chemistry of cosmic carbon molecular nanostructures. New insights are being made into the properties and resilience of these fascinating molecular species that are not only of fundamental importance for understanding the chemistry of space but have wider terrestrial relevance and impact in nanotechnology and catalysis.

Klavs Hansen et al. (2025),
Roadmap on carbon molecular nanostructures in space
,
European Physical Journal D 79:94, https://doi.org/10.1140/epjd/s10053-025-00984-1

Editors-in-Chief
F. Croccolo, G. Fragneto and H. Stark
We are happy to find such an accurate and well done editing work (as always with my experience with European Physical Journal series). We appreciate this. Thank you very much for your work.

Denis Goldobin

ISSN (Print Edition): 2429-5299
ISSN (Electronic Edition): 2725-3090

© EDP Sciences, Società Italiana di Fisica and Springer-Verlag