Fuente: Press releases - SRON Netherlands Institute
Expuesto el: lunes, 01 de octubre de 2012 7:04
Autor: Press releases
Asunto: Cold crystals shed light on the formation of our planetary system
| Wednesday, 03 October 2012 An international team of astronomers found that the building blocks for planets in a baby brother of our solar system probably formed under circumstances that closely resemble the circumstances in our early Solar System. The discovery suggests that a planetary system like ours can form around very different stars. The results are published tomorrow in Nature.
The astronomers base their findings on their study on olivine crystals in the dusty disk around the young star Beta Pictoris, 63 lightyears from Earth. The dust in the disk around this star originates from catastrophic collisions between thousands of small, icy comet-like bodies orbiting the star. Using the Herschel space telescope of the European Space Agency (ESA) the astronomers were able to study the dust. They discovered olivine crystals with a composition strikingly similar to olivine crystals found in comets of our Solar System. This suggest that these crystals were formed under similar circumstances. This is a surprise because Beta Pictoris outweighs our Sun with a factor 1,5, is eight times as luminous and its planetary system is still under construction. Primitive building blocks It appears that the cold, magnesium-rich crystals that have been discovered by the Herschel telescope do not come from colliding asteroids (or bigger celestial bodies) but from collisions between large numbers of icy comets. They closely resemble the most primitive building blocks of our Solar System. Heat treatment Forensic research "It is fascinating stuff to be able to deduct information on the origin of our Solar System from the amount of iron in these olivines. Forensic research in space you might say. It shows that our home around the sun is not so unique after all." Nature
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