PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

University of Hawaii scientists make a big splash

Recent study suggests space dust carries water and organic compounds

2014-01-25
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Marcie Grabowski
mworkman@hawaii.edu
808-956-3151
University of Hawaii ‑ SOEST
University of Hawaii scientists make a big splash Recent study suggests space dust carries water and organic compounds

Researchers from the University of Hawaii – Manoa (UHM) School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST), Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and University of California – Berkeley discovered that interplanetary dust particles (IDPs) could deliver water and organics to the Earth and other terrestrial planets.

Interplanetary dust, dust that has come from comets, asteroids, and leftover debris from the birth of the solar system, continually rains down on the Earth and other Solar System bodies. These particles are bombarded by solar wind, predominately hydrogen ions. This ion bombardment knocks the atoms out of order in the silicate mineral crystal and leaves behind oxygen that is more available to react with hydrogen, for example, to create water molecules.

"It is a thrilling possibility that this influx of dust has acted as a continuous rainfall of little reaction vessels containing both the water and organics needed for the eventual origin of life on Earth and possibly Mars," said Hope Ishii, new Associate Researcher in the Hawaii Institute of Geophysics and Planetology (HIGP) at UHM SOEST and co-author of the study. This mechanism of delivering both water and organics simultaneously would also work for exoplanets, worlds that orbit other stars. These raw ingredients of dust and hydrogen ions from their parent star would allow the process to happen in almost any planetary system.

Implications of this work are potentially huge: Airless bodies in space such as asteroids and the Moon, with ubiquitous silicate minerals, are constantly being exposed to solar wind irradiation that can generate water. In fact, this mechanism of water formation would help explain remotely sensed data of the Moon, which discovered OH and preliminary water, and possibly explains the source of water ice in permanently shadowed regions of the Moon.

"Perhaps more exciting," said Ishii, "interplanetary dust, especially dust from primitive asteroids and comets, has long been known to carry organic carbon species that survive entering the Earth's atmosphere, and we have now demonstrated that it also carries solar-wind-generated water. So we have shown for the first time that water and organics can be delivered together."

It has been known since the Apollo-era, when astronauts brought back rocks and soil from the Moon, that solar wind causes the chemical makeup of the dust's surface layer to change. Hence, the idea that solar wind irradiation might produce water-species has been around since then, but whether it actually does produce water has been debated. The reasons for the uncertainty are that the amount of water produced is small and it is localized in very thin rims on the surfaces of silicate minerals so that older analytical techniques were unable to confirm the presence of water.

Using a state-of-the-art transmission electron microscope, the scientists have now actually detected water produced by solar-wind irradiation in the space-weathered rims on silicate minerals in interplanetary dust particles. Futher, on the bases of laboratory-irradiated minerals that have similar amorphous rims, they were able to conclude that the water forms from the interaction of solar wind hydrogen ions (H+) with oxygen in the silicate mineral grains.

This recent work does not suggest how much water may have been delivered to Earth in this manner from IDPs.

"In no way do we suggest that it was sufficient to form oceans, for example," said Ishii. "However, the relevance of our work is not the origin of the Earth's oceans but that we have shown continuous, co-delivery of water and organics intimately intermixed."

In future work, the scientists will attempt to estimate water abundances delivered to Earth by IDPs. Further, they will explore in more detail what other organic (carbon-based) and inorganic species are present in the water in the vesicles in interplanetary dust rims.



INFORMATION:

Detection of solar wind-produced water in irradiated rims on silicate minerals, John Bradley, Hope Ishii, Jeffrey Gillis-Davis, James Ciston, Michael Nielsen, Hans Bechtel, Michael Martin. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, doi: 10.1073/pnas.1320115111



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

From one cell to many: How did multicellularity evolve?

2014-01-25
In the beginning there were single cells. Today, many millions of years later, most plants, animals, ...

Carbon dioxide paves the way to unique nanomaterials

2014-01-24
In common perception, carbon dioxide is just a greenhouse gas, one of the major environmental problems of mankind. For Warsaw chemists CO2 became, however, something ...

Material developed could speed up underwater communications by orders of magnitude

2014-01-24
University of California, San Diego electrical engineering professor Zhaowei Liu and colleagues have taken the first steps in a project to develop fast-blinking ...

Scientists reveal why life got big in the Earth's early oceans

2014-01-24
Why did life forms first begin to get larger and what advantage did this increase in size provide? UCLA biologists working with an international team of scientists examined the ...

10 years on Mars leads to livable mud

2014-01-24
Some of the oldest minerals ever analysed by NASA's Mars Opportunity Rover show that around four billion years ago Mars had liquid water so fresh it could have supported life. The findings were announced in a special 'Exploring ...

40 percent of parents learn how to use technology from their children

2014-01-24
Washington, DC (January 21, 2014) – Just how are adults learning to use technology? Chances are if ...

Biomarker for stress hormones in polar bears, wildlife affected by global climate change

2014-01-24
AMHERST, Mass. – Chemical analyses by neuroscientist Jerrold Meyer and colleagues at the University of Massachusetts Amherst are helping to establish hair ...

Landmark egg production study reveals reduction in environmental impact over past 50 years

2014-01-24
PARK RIDGE, Ill., (January 24, 2014) – A new study published ...

Do religious people love their neighbors? Yes -- some neighbors, Baylor study finds

2014-01-24
Most religions teach their followers to "Love thy neighbor" — including those of different races, nationalities or beliefs. But is religiousness really related to love of neighbors? ...

CWRU researchers find epileptic activity spreads in new way

2014-01-24
Researchers in the biomedical engineering department at Case Western Reserve University have found that epileptic activity can spread through a part of the brain in a new way, suggesting a possible ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Genomic data shows widespread mpox transmission in West Africa prior to 2022 global outbreak

Research spotlight: Gender differences in primary care physician earnings and outcomes

Eating craved foods with meals lessens cravings, boosts weight loss

Limited evidence suggests calorie restriction may slightly reduce depressive symptoms in people with elevated cardiometabolic risk

U of A researchers developing world's first petahertz-speed phototransistor in ambient conditions

NRL hosts Innovation Day for Industry

Here comes the boom! Studying the effects of rocket launch sonic booms on neighboring communities #ASA188

Researchers capture brain activity with imager that is smaller than an eyelash

A head and a hundred tails: how a branching worm manages reproductive complexity

Investment risk for energy infrastructure construction is highest for nuclear power plants, lowest for solar

Personality traits influence the development of insomnia

Controlling these 8 risk factors may eliminate early death risk for those with high blood pressure

A groundbreaking discovery of a common master switch to cure Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and other brain-related diseases

Novel data streaming software chases light speed from accelerator to supercomputer

UK child sexual abuse survivors lack support - report

Rice’s Mikos elected to the European Academy of Sciences

Hari Kalva, Ph.D., inducted into the Florida Inventors Hall of Fame

Machine learning model helps identify patients at risk of postpartum depression

The US has a new most powerful laser

Team creates light-activated therapy to target hard-to-treat cancer

Tiny microlaser sensors offer supercharged biosensing

Having a team therapist reduces burnout in critical care nurses

Ciliary dysfunction linked to bronchopulmonary dysplasia severity

Inhaled microplastics inhibit key immune cell in the lungs

R. Rex and Carrol Parris make $10 million gift to launch USC Longevity Research Accelerator at Keck School of Medicine

Stars or numbers? How rating formats change consumer behavior

Empowering robots with human-like perception to navigate unwieldy terrain

Human brain activity linked to memory recall

BeginNGS® Consortium announces Alexion, AstraZeneca Rare Disease as its first Platinum member

New evidence links tire chemicals to chronic liver and brain toxicity

[Press-News.org] University of Hawaii scientists make a big splash
Recent study suggests space dust carries water and organic compounds