Stellar Apocalypse Shows Water 69
Andy_Howell writes "Astronomers using the SWAS satellite found a cloud of water vapor around the aging giant star CW Leonis, and the most plausible explanation is that the star incresed in lumiosty during its giant phase and is boiling away its comets. This is the first evidence for water in another solar system. In five billion years, our sun is expected to do the same thing."
Incredible discovery (Score:1)
Now we're cooking with (superheated) gas! (Score:1)
I always knew this CW Leonis sun couldn't cook... it even burns water!
Anonymous cowards will insert the appropriate groan when and where they feel like it.
Steam (Score:1)
There is a more logical explanation why there is a big cloud of water vapor around this star: since this is an old star, it is still powered with steam engines instead of nuclear fusion, used in more modern stars.
Integral Trees (Score:1)
Pillars? (Score:2)
this water.
OH MY GOD NO! (Score:2)
I better start living my life now then and download as much porn as I can before time runs out
Re:Alternative theories? (Score:3)
However, outside of a stellar atmosphere, you can easily form other molecules containing oxygen, and since hydrogen is the most abundant element, water is going to be formed in reasonably large quantities.
As for dying stars being able to melt comets when their main sequence progenitors could not... This is not a surprising result. When a star enters the red giant phase, the outer layers of the star may cool off, but the luminosity (the power output) of the star goes way up (think Betelgeuse). Even if the outer portion of the star is cooler, it's still going to be warm enough to melt ice!
Finally, I'm not sure what the big deal about all this is anyway. Astronomers have been observing H2O masers around red giants and star forming regions for years. We've known for a long time that water is out there...
Re:Incredible discovery (Score:1)
I think this result is particularly surprising since one might expect that any winds or shocks thrown off by a star capable of boiling away a comet might also tend to powerful enough to destroy the molecules generated. If that really is the mechanism involved, it is a remarkable coincidence that the winds are just powerful enough to ablate the comets, but not so powerful as to destroy the molecules present.
Hey wait a second. If complex molecules are created on the backs of dust particles, what are dust particles made of? I'd presume thay they are complex molecules. Doesn't this sound just a bit like the chicken before the egg?
I can't wait. (Score:2)
Re:Forget it (Score:1)
Milky Way and Andromeda as a whole will collide, the stars themselves don't (maybe one or two pairs). True, a supernova in our neighbourhood might be pretty bad for live due to all the radiation, but it won't blow our solar system away. If we aren't in space with dense particle clouds, these bad ass stars won't be that near, they might still be dangerous however.
Re:Water or beer in stars (Score:1)
Cosmic bidet (Score:2)
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So . . . (Score:3)
Re:Incredible discovery (Score:5)
It is actually very remarkable that molecules exist in space at all. Why? There are two sides to the process -- creation and destruction.
(*) Creation : Interstellar space is in general very tenuous , and so the likelihood that any two atoms combine in the gaseous phase to form a molecule is very improbable.
(*) Destruction - Once a molecule is created, it doesn't live forever. Space is a very harsh environment, and any molecules created are subjected to harsh cosmic radiation, the stellar radiation field (resulting from all stars surrounding it), as well as stellar winds and shocks. Any of these processes is cabable of disrupting molecules.
When you go ahead and do the naive estimate for the abundance of a molecule balancing creation and destruction rates, assuming only gaseous phase processes, you find that it is highly unlikely to find any substantial amounts of molecules in interstellar space. Indeed, when astronomers first invented instruments capable of detecting rotational mode transitions of molecules like CO and H_2O in interstellar space, their theoretician colleagues told them to forget the plan.
The reason why we have clouds of molecular gas in our galaxy today is a rather amazing one which no one originally anticipated. Besides gas, there are also small, solid dust grains belched out from winds from cool red giant stars in their final phases of evolution. Atoms collide and freeze out onto the surfaces of these grains, where they can remain for a very long time, migrating very slowly along the surface via Brownian processes. Every once in a while, it will bump into another or molecule frozen out in a similar fashion, thereby creating a more complex molecule. The dust grains catalyze the generation of molecules -- without them, we wouldn't have such an abundance of molecular gas in the galaxy today. Indeed, astronomers believe star formation in the early universe was substantially different from that which occurs today because such dust grains would have been completely absent.
I think this result is particularly surprising since one might expect that any winds or shocks thrown off by a star capable of boiling away a comet might also tend to powerful enough to destroy the molecules generated. If that really is the mechanism involved, it is a remarkable coincidence that the winds are just powerful enough to ablate the comets, but not so powerful as to destroy the molecules present.
Bob
Water and Life, elsewhere... (Score:1)
mefus
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um, er... eh -- *click*
Re:Suicide Watch? (Score:1)
mefus
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um, er... eh -- *click*
Re:Except that (Score:1)
That's where we've pinned our mythology.
mefus
--
um, er... eh -- *click*
Re:my story (Score:1)
mefus
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um, er... eh -- *click*
Re:/. is on crack (Score:1)
I'm more inclined to believe it's a slashcode bug.
mefus
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um, er... eh -- *click*
Re:/. is on crack (Score:1)
mefus
--
um, er... eh -- *click*
Re:H2O (Score:2)
The detection system undoubtedly relies on the absorbance of light (passing through the vapor cloud, originating from the central star) at wavelengths peculiar to interference by H20...
mefus
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um, er... eh -- *click*
five billion years (Score:2)
The story about Andromeda colliding with the Milky Way earlier today said that this would happen in 15-billion years. How is a person supposed to make contingency plans with all of this conflicting information!?
Re:Except that (Score:2)
The constellations that the greeks saw were actually visibly different than the ones we see today.
Doug
Re:Except that (Score:1)
The only difference here being that the stars will all tug on each other with gravity, distorting the shapes of the galaxies.
Barring some bizzare incident, the sun will be here for 5+ billion years in some form or another (and with any luck, we'll be elsewhere as well).
Re:H2O (Score:2)
Really small.
And to get enough water to stay collected in a vaccum (where water likes to sublimate quickly) so that we can detect it from this far away is rare.
Now for its existence elsewhere in the universe, that's a no-brainer. It DOES. It's a simple molecule.
Re:The end of hope, the betrayal of eternity. (Score:2)
Snooty bottled water of the future (Score:3)
Alternative theories? (Score:1)
Ok, the star has a lot of oxygen. The astronomers assume that the oxygen is bound to the carbon, but what if this is not the case? IANAA, but what if there's enough free oxygen and hydrogen than can bind, and then perhaps escape from the star? (I'm not sure if its possible that just the oxygen comes from the star and then binds to interstellar hydrogen.)
Another, perhaps better possibility might that the water is from an earlier stage, where all the oxygen was not bound to carbon. My introductionary astronomy book says about small stars:
Thus, if the escaping mixed matter is hydrogen and oxygen....-> huge cloud of water!
If this idea is valid, the astronomers probably have already thought about it and have taken it into account, and for some reason have judged it unsatisfactory.
I personally find it very difficult to imagine how a dying star could vaporize the comets around it, if it couldn't do it when it was still young and bright. Perhaps it could have done it during some middle-age crisis, for example if it was an inflated gas giant at some point.
*shrug*, IANAA, just an amateur.
Re:Water or beer in stars (Score:2)
"Beer Molecules" is actually a misunderstanding, since there's various compounds that make up beer, all with different molecular structures. It's mainly water, some alcohol (C2H5OH - again, not massively complicated, but a bit tougher to make than water) and various compounds that give it it's taste. Chances of all of these appearing in the right concentration to make it drinkable are slim, to say the least, but then it is an infinite universe (probably).....
PS - Slashdot really needs to come up with a way to type subscripts in chemical formulas.
Re:Water and Life, elsewhere... (Score:1)
Except that (Score:1)
Water or beer in stars (Score:1)
Re:Incredible discovery (Score:2)
Maybe this is bad news. Maybe NASA was hoping to get out of the red by selling water to thirsty aliens. So much for the Culligan module on Alpha (or whatever it's called today)
Ice Pirates (Score:1)
But our sun won't be able to do the same (Score:1)
Apocalypse? (Score:1)
H2O (Score:1)
Re:Move than just proving water (Score:1)
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/europaorbiter/. [nasa.gov]
Water, Beer, etc. (Score:4)
there was this Slash Story [slashdot.org] on how the compounds for life are all over space.
Farscape is starting to look reasonable.
Check out the Vinny the Vampire [eplugz.com] comic strip
Forget it (Score:2)
It sounds like in five billion years the sun will do no such thing. After the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies collide [slashdot.org], there won't be anything left but rapidly nova'ing stars and vast stretches of burning gases. Something radically other than human will be here to witness that weird night sky.
Re:Suicide Watch? (Score:1)
Suicide Watch? (Score:4)
Re:Apocalypse? (Score:1)
Magius_AR
Re:Move than just proving water (Reality Check) (Score:2)
But HA! We got the grasslands! It's not all computers and slashdot out there... Go enjoy what we have before your cheap monitor makes your eyes fall out.
Re:Incredible discovery (Score:2)
It's like we can reasonably be sure there is intelligent life somewhere else in the universe (there's not much here, what with all the ACs running around), but we have no proof. It's incredibly unlikely that humanity is the only sentient life in the universe, but until SETI@home finds something or E.T. lands in Southern California (although, if he did, who'd notice?) we can't be sure if we're alone or not.
Nice sarcasm though.
Kierthos
First 14 and now 5? (Score:2)
and from Earlier today:
A lof of people know that our Sun will be a red giant in about 15 billion years, and its size will increase dramaticaly beyond the Mercury orbit and we will burn.
Boy, I'm glad that the
The worst part, however, would be the constant revisioning of physics because posters could never get their facts straight.
Move than just proving water (Score:4)
The Sky is Falling! (Score:2)
I'm sick of all these doomsday theorists. Isn't it obvious? Some script kiddies saw another IRC hub to take down and accidentally vaporized an entire solar system!
I can just see the slasback heading this week... EFNet IRC blows up, so does IRC in another galaxy.
Re:Suicide Watch? (Score:1)
Isn't there only one Solar system? (Score:1)
Re:H2O (Score:1)
They do not claim to be the first people to find water outside of the solar system. It has been known for years that it does. A quick search on the internet will find articles published in reputable journals showing this.
As far as being a being a 'no-brainer', one cannot claim that because it seems obvious or simple it must be true. That is not science.
Well whoopity-doo! (Score:2)
Titan AE.... (Score:1)
Re:But our sun won't be able to do the same (Score:1)
So most likely, the sun would not be affected unless the center of the andromeda passes near by (in astronomical terms!), if that happened (due to the much higher stelar density near a galaxy's core), then the planatary system might be destroyed as tidal forces would strip the planets away from the sun (could anyone say bad luck!). The sun would be unaffected however.
In order for individual stars to be affected, one would have to have a direct hit, just as implausible as Rutherfords famous backwards deflection in his experiment with shooting alphaparticles at a gold foil. 99.99% of the particles passed the foil with little or no deflection (He actualy used this information to calculate the diameter of the atomic nuclius relative to the atomic diameter).
Well guess that was my 2 cents
Yours Yazeran
Plan: To go to Mars one day with a hammer.
Re:What about the planets? (Score:1)
Planets in other star systems do also not get the benefit of this vapour cloud, as it would be too dispersed before it enters nearby star-systems.
Yours Yazeran
Plan: To go to Mars one day with a hammer.
Re:Incredible discovery (Score:1)
Evidence of Water? (Score:2)
Re:Ice Pirates (now OT) (Score:1)
As far as the movie being cheezy, I agree! More cheese than in Wisconsin, more corn than in Nebraska!
Re:pussy (Score:1)
You're talking to a man with -108 karma here
How the hell did you do that? I mean, after you're down around -10 or so, you start posting at -1 by default, so that means you can't lose any more karma, right? Or did you do something to deliberately piss off the editors?A blight on the fingers that typed this obscenity! (Score:1)
What is a life without appreciation for the poetic beauty of Ice Pirates? Truly, it is a peerless wonder, a magnificent gift from the gods themselves.
O, shameful day, when a soulless sore on the face of humanity may mock humanity's greatest achievement with impunity! O, sorrowful day, when an innocent child, as we are all innocent children in our heart of hearts, is denied the light of life that comes in VHS format!
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The end of hope, the betrayal of eternity. (Score:2)
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but what about indoor swimming pools? (Score:3)
Re:Pillars? (Score:1)
Finally, the Rock has come back to
Re:Water or beer in stars (Score:1)
Re:H2O (Score:2)
I decided to subject this theory to the scientific method:
Hypothesis: as stated above.
Test: I walk out into my back yard. I see the Atlantic ocean.
Conclusion: Damn, he's onto something. I see a whole lot of water out there.
Re:Hrm (Score:1)
Just here to put your heart at ease. You're welcome.
Re:Water, Beer, etc. (Score:2)
Not surprising (Score:1)
Re:/. is on crack (Score:1)
Nevermind...