Spectroscopic and structural properties of methoxymethyl radical (CH3OCH2, RDME) are determined using explicitly correlated ab initio
methods. This radical of astrophysical and atmospheric relevance has not been fully characterized at low temperatures, which has delayed
astrophysical research. We provide rovibrational parameters, excitations to the low energy electronic states, torsional and inversion barriers,
and low vibrational energy levels. In the electronic ground state (X2A), which appears “clean” from nonadiabatic effects, the minimum energy
structure is an asymmetric geometry whose rotational constants and dipole moment have been determined to be A0 = 46 718.67 MHz,
B0 = 10 748.42 MHz, and C0 = 9272.51 MHz, and 1.432D (µA = 0.695D, µB = 1.215D, µC = 0.302D), respectively. A variational procedure has
been applied to determine torsion-inversion energy levels. Each level splits into 3 subcomponents (A1/A2 and E) corresponding to the three
methyl torsion minima. Although the potential energy surface presents 12 minima, at low temperatures, the infrared band shapes correspond
to a surface with only three minima because the top of the inversion V barrier at = 0X (109 cm-1) stands below the zero point vibrational
energy and the CH2 torsional barrier is relatively high ( 2000 cm-1). The methyl torsion barrier was computed to be 500 cm-1 and produces
a splitting of 0.01 cm-1 of the ground vibrational state.