. Medical and Hospital News .




.
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Fingering the culprit that polluted the Solar System
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Aug 08, 2012

File image.

For decades it has been thought that a shock wave from a supernova explosion triggered the formation of our Solar System. According to this theory, the shock wave also injected material from the exploding star into a cloud of dust and gas, and the newly polluted cloud collapsed to form the Sun and its surrounding planets.

New work from Carnegie's Alan Boss and Sandra Keiser provides the first fully three-dimensional (3-D) models for how this process could have happened. Their work will be published by The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Traces of the supernova's pollution can be found in meteorites in the form of short-lived radioactive isotopes, or SLRIs. SLRIs-versions of elements with the same number of protons, but a different number of neutrons-found in primitive meteorites decay on time scales of millions of years and turn into different, so-called daughter, elements.

A million years may sound like a long time, but it is actually considered short when compared to other radioactive isotopes studied by geochemists and cosmochemists, which have half-lives measured in billions of years.

When scientists find the daughter elements distributed in telltale patterns in primitive meteorites, this means that the parent SLRIs had to be created just before the meteorites themselves were formed. This presents a timing problem, as the SLRIs must be formed in a supernova, injected into the presolar cloud, and trapped inside the meteoritic precursors, all in less than a million years.

The telltale patterns prove that the relevant daughter elements were not the ones that were injected. This is because the abundances of these daughters in different mineral phases in the meteorite are correlated with the abundances of a stable isotope of the parent element.

Different elements have different chemical behaviors during the formation of these first solids, and the fact that the daughter elements correlate with the parent elements means that those daughters had to be derived from the decay of unstable parent elements after those solids were crystallized.

One of these SLRIs, iron-60, is only created in significant amounts by nuclear reactions in massive stars. The iron-60 must have come from a supernova, or from a giant star called an AGB star.

Boss and Keiser's previous modeling showed that it was likely that a supernova triggered our Solar System's formation, as AGB star shocks are too thick to inject the iron-60 into the cloud. Supernova shocks are hundreds of times thinner, leading to more efficient injection.

Now Boss and Keiser have extended those models to 3-D, so they can see the shock wave striking the gas cloud, compressing it and forming a parabolic shock front that envelopes the cloud, creating finger-like indentations in the cloud's surface. The fingers inject the SLRI pollution from the supernova.

Less than 0.1 million years later, the cloud collapses and forms the core of the protostar that became the Sun and its surrounding planets. The 3-D models show that only one or two fingers are likely to have caused the SLRI pollution found in primitive meteorites.

"The evidence leads us to believe that a supernova was indeed the culprit," said Boss. However, more detective work needs to be done: Boss and Keiser still need to find the combination of cloud and shock wave parameters that will line up perfectly with observations of exploding supernovae.

Related Links
Carnegie Institution
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



STELLAR CHEMISTRY
A blue whirlpool in The River
Munich, Germany (SPX) Aug 07, 2012
The galaxy NGC 1187 is seen almost face-on, which gives us a good view of its spiral structure. About half a dozen prominent spiral arms can be seen, each containing large amounts of gas and dust. The bluish features in the spiral arms indicate the presence of young stars born out of clouds of interstellar gas. Looking towards the central regions, we see the bulge of the galaxy glowing yel ... read more


STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Armageddon looming? Tell Bruce Willis not to bother

TEPCO video shows tensions as Fukushima crisis unfurls

FEMA cell-phone alerts warn too many

Queen, politicians, Nobel winner named to UN social panel

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Next Galileo satellite reaches French Guiana launch site

Raytheon completes GPS OCX iteration 1.4 Critical Design Review

Mission accomplished, GIOVE-B heads into deserved retirement

Boeing Ships 3rd GPS IIF Satellite to Cape Canaveral for Launch

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
It's in our genes: Why women outlive men

Later Stone Age got earlier start in South Africa than thought

Modern culture 44,000 years ago

Hey, I'm over here: Men and women see things differently

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Baby rhinos given second chance at S. African orphanage

Study shows how elephants produce their deep 'voices'

More code cracking

Boston University researchers expand synthetic biology's toolkit

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Malawi to test 250,000 people for HIV in one week

Mexico destroys 8 mn chickens amid bird flu outbreak

New bat virus could hold key to Hendra virus

Vaccine research shows vigilance needed against evolution of more-virulent malaria

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Tibetan sets himself alight in China: group

Workshop blast in east China kills 13

China's passion for fashion catapults blogger to stardom

China accuses US of prejudice on religious issues

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Nigeria intensifies search for 4 kidnapped foreigners: navy

Somali pirates release Taiwan fishing boat

ONR Sensor and Software Suite Hunts Down More Than 600 Suspect Boats

Netherlands beefs up anti-piracy forces

STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Walker's World: August, the cruel month

US watchdog doubts Standard Chartered's 'core values'

Asia business confidence falters on China: survey

Outside View: Unemployment rises


Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News

.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement