Carbon From Outer Space Older Than Our Sun 40
Roland Piquepaille writes "While looking at interplanetary dust particles (IDPs) found in the Earth's stratosphere, researchers from the Washington University in St. Louis have found carbon older than the Solar System. They identified the organic material by its carbon isotopic composition, different from the one of carbon found on Earth. "Our findings are proof that there is presolar organic material coming into the Solar System yet today," said Christine Floss, the leading scientist. "This material has been preserved for more than 4.5 billion years, which is the age of the Solar System. It's amazing that it has survived for so long." This overview contains more details and references. It also contains pictures including the one of a sample's isotopic structure at a sub-micrometer scale."
About time (Score:5, Interesting)
Our findings are proof that there is presolar organic material coming into the Solar System yet today
I would have been shocked if this hadn't been found eventually - but it's nice to have positive proof.
Seems to me that this evidence gives a small boost to the Panspermia theory.
SB
Re:About time (Score:5, Informative)
by Theorellior, of Everything2.com
Re:About time (Score:3, Interesting)
I agree that it's possible, but whether it's actually happened or not, in our particular case, is open to argument. Here's the two arguements I see right now as being the most important.
For: The timescales involved would allow for plenty of chances for life to propogate, survive the conditions/impacts, etc, and re-establish itself. Somewhat supported by the ubiquity of organic molecules in pre-stellar clouds.
Against: Assumes that life started elsewhere first. Presumes bacterial spore survi
Re:About time (Score:1)
Re:About time (Score:2, Interesting)
That's an interesting question; but the civilizations would have to be incredibly long-lived, thousands or tens of thousands times longer lived than if they used radio waves.
I think that one possible answer, and the likely one, to Fermi's Paradox is that civilizations evolve technologically past using radio waves for communication very, very rapidly, in centuries or less. They find some way to communicate using *insert future tech here* that EM level civs haven't discovered yet.
I doubt we'd be of an
isotopic ratios (Score:5, Informative)
Re:isotopic ratios (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:isotopic ratios (Score:1)
Ancient Carbon Origin (Score:5, Funny)
Jabba the Hut had Lando freeze a bunch of people including Han Solo in Carbonite. He hung Han on the wall where he was later rescued. The rest got launched into space and were used for target practice. This was probably their remains.
Ah, come on... It's late, it's Friday, and it's supposed to be funny! :-)
May not mean anything (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:May not mean anything (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:May not mean anything (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:May not mean anything (Score:1)
As for me, I have some credentials, but I don't think credentials are very important when compared to arguing a point on actual facts. Afterall, even the best of scientists make quite
Re:May not mean anything (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:May not mean anything (Score:2)
Re:May not mean anything (Score:1)
Re:May not mean anything (Score:1)
A lot of strange information doubting the physics of nuclear decay, even tho we have plenty of lab and theoretical basis for same, because once again, decay issues
Re:May not mean anything (Score:1)
Re: May not mean anything (Score:2)
> It may not be anything but a statistical anomoly. How we date and locate things has always fascinated me. I.e. this is older because it is underneath this other thing. This volcanic rock is this old because there is this much of a potasium isotope present. We have been acurately recording radiometrics for how long now? 20-30 years? (I know we have been recording them longer but not to the accuracy we can today)
If you can make a solid argument, you should be posting to Science too, rather than to Sla
Re:May not mean anything (Score:4, Insightful)
Assume that they have 6*10^20 atoms of the stuff. If the half life is a billion years, then they can 'sample' >10^10 decays. That's not a small sample.
YAW.
Re:May not mean anything(Epistemology of HalfLife) (Score:3, Informative)
I see your point and agree that using science to know the past is very tricky. In the case of measuring half-lives, the methods are statistically accurate because of the huge sample size in atoms. If you start with 6 x 10^23 atom
Vacuum cleaner? (Score:4, Funny)
How do you do that? You catch them with a giant Swiffer mop?
Not really that impressive (Score:2, Insightful)
Not really, some of you may recall that the law of conservation matter sez that matter cannot be created nor destroyed. So it had to survive. If it hadn't then this would be amazing because it would cast strong evidence against the law of conservatin of matter. I'm mean, really now, what else would it do besides float around in space forever?
desrever si gis!
Re:Not really that impressive (Score:2)
The Cosmic Recycling Center (Score:4, Informative)
Oh, and those theoretical apparitions called black holes -- the great Insinkerators in the sky.
Well. (Score:5, Insightful)
So this is news because?
Re:Well. (Score:5, Informative)
Surprise... (Score:2, Insightful)
Actually... (Score:1)
So, next time you look at a gold ring, remember that his atoms were "baked" in a supernova, a couple of billion years ago...
Cosmic age of Uranium (Score:3, Interesting)
Here is a fun experiment even you slashdot simpletons can do. Uranium isotopes decay at different rates. Today U235/U238 = 1/127. Assuming all of the U on earth was formed at the same time, in the same supernova U235/U238 = 1. If you carry through the calculation for time elapsed you get 6 billion years. Pretty neat. That doesn't make the carbon results seem that extraordinary.
Yeah, but ... (Score:2)
well, duh! (Score:2)
Is not almost all carbon on Earth older than the Sun? I was under the impression that it was pretty much accepted that all elements heavier than hydrogen were made in stars. Since I doubt that much (relatively speaking) made on Sol gets out of the gravity well, that pretty much says our carbon (and all of our other elements, save the little we made outselves or that is the result of natural fision of oth