Water Vapor Seen 'Raining' Onto Young Star System 53
tonganqn writes "Using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope scientists have discovered huge amounts of water vapor in the young star system, called NGC 1333-IRAS 4B. From the article: 'The water vapor is pouring down from the system's natal cloud and smacking into a dusty disk where planets are thought to form. The observations provide the first direct look at how water, an essential ingredient for life as we know it, begins to make its way into planets, possibly even rocky ones like our own.'"
Oxygen and Hydrogen (Score:5, Interesting)
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I don't think a comet is going to be big enoug
Re:Oxygen and Hydrogen (Score:4, Interesting)
And then, how did our solar system get gas dense enough to form solid ice in massive planet size bodies like Pluto, et al?
I don't know either. Perhaps we are only seeing a minute fraction of the gas in that area. The water is a minor condensate, and the comets/planets are a minor condensate from the water.
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Where did the comets get their water? Eventually a lot of gas is going to have to clump together and react, it's pretty thin stuff. I guess the coldness of space might limit oxygen's ability to act like an ideal gas and expand to fill the volume of space.
It's a Steam Punk thing. (Score:4, Funny)
Electric Universe! Come on, man, just think about it. It takes time to develope these things. Before we had the fancy, new Electric Universe, we had the Water-Powered Universe.
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It's too nebulous a process to explain here.
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They'd be happy to answer it (or go to the Universe Today website).
My guess... billions of years is long enough to make rare events commonplace. (I'm imagining oxygen and hydrogen ejected from dying stars, followed by cosmic rays causing oxygen radical formation (singlet oxygen is quite easy to make), reacting with any hydrogen coming in contact).
Gases (Score:2)
As for density, the article is about a star-forming region, where densities are much higher. That's the whole point; gravitation is bringing all this matter together into a big cloud, and densities are becoming high enough that molecules -- especially ultra-stable ones like water -- can form.
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Hot wet young star systems?? (Score:5, Funny)
Like hell if I'm ever going to let my children visit that star system.
MODS ON CRACK (Score:1, Offtopic)
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(The background to this is that the collective slashdot sense of humour underwhelms me significantly.)
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But they will be thousands of years old by then.
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Ultimate Test Case (Score:1, Offtopic)
Would this "disk" be Blue-ray or HD DVD?
I'm wondering because the resistance to dust and water (mud) could be a deciding factor in the format wars.
Nobody proved Einstein wrong... (Score:1, Interesting)
Or, alternatively... (Score:3, Funny)
So... (Score:4, Funny)
Rob
If we had better telescopes . . . (Score:4, Funny)
Well, not really, but it's cool to think of.
I'm confused! (Score:1)
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One in Thirty (Score:2, Interesting)
IANAA. Is this a reasonable explanation?
In Space... (Score:1)
re: In Space... (Score:1)
oh noes! (Score:2, Funny)
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"like our own..." (Score:2)
life (Score:2)
could provide an environment where basic building blocks of life like
amino acids, lipids, and such could form.
Then these blocks could get frozen into the water vapor,as comets, and sent roaming.
water + dust ... (Score:3, Funny)
Seriously, this might solve how a disc of cigarette smoke-sized particles can condense to form planetesimals, and thus planets.
Don't be too thrilled about this news (Score:2)
fire hose confusion (Score:2)