[HN Gopher] Carbon's interstellar journey to Earth
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Carbon's interstellar journey to Earth
Author : dnetesn
Score : 22 points
Date : 2021-04-04 10:36 UTC (1 days ago)
(HTM) web link (phys.org)
(TXT) w3m dump (phys.org)
| cletus wrote:
| The sequence of events that led to the Earth being here with us
| on it is kind of mind-blowing in terms of physics.
|
| First, the nascent universe had to cool such that nucleons
| formed, which then became hydrogen. This matter wasn't evenly
| distributed. Some of it under its own weight collapsed under
| gravity and birthed the first stars.
|
| It seems that shock waves in nebulae trigger star formation. This
| could be black holes and/or neutron stars merging, supernovae and
| possibly other events.
|
| These stars became the nuclear furnaces for heavier elements. The
| death of these stars spread these metals (in astronomy terms;
| anything heavier than Helium). This cycle continued until there
| was enough matter in the protoplanetary disk to form rocky
| planets, of which we are one (of many).
|
| This article talks about the nuances of how and when carbon
| became part of this system. While that's certainly interesting,
| it's the heavier elements (than iron) that I find more
| interesting. Anyone with rudimentary physics knowledge knows that
| this path only forms elements up to iron because beyond that it
| consumes energy.
|
| So heavier elements were seeded in this process through
| supernovae and, as we've confirmed in recent years, from neutron
| star mergers. So the right sort of stars need to form in the
| right way and die and then their remnants need to merge to
| scatter these elements.
|
| I saw one study that suggested the uranium on earth formed by
| such an event 80-200 million years before the Earth did. That's
| kind of crazy to think about.
|
| We are literally made of stardust.
| jjbinx007 wrote:
| It is humbling and also rather difficult to get one's head
| around.
|
| However, when you consider the observable universe is 96bn
| light-years across and contains hundreds of billions of
| galaxies, and the observable universe is very likely only a
| small part of the universe beyond then incredibly unlikely-
| sounding things will happen all the time somewhere and some
| when.
|
| It's amazing we know so much considering most of our knowledge
| about the universe has arisen in the last c.300 years.
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