Universe May Hold Diamond Concentrations
Our galaxy may contain high concentrations of tiny diamonds in carbon-rich planetary nebulae. That's the finding of a group of researchers from the
Institut d'Astrophysique Spatiale in Paris.
The group theorized that the low pressures and temperatures inside the nebula give birth to diamonds. Conversely, it is high temperatures and pressure that foster diamond growth on Earth. The difference may lie in the presence of a tiny molecule called adamantane that serves as a precursor for diamonds on Earth and may be present in late-stage stars. The group concedes, however, that these findings are preliminary and open to dispute.
"In some of these nebulae, an infrared spectral characteristic has been observed and remains unexplained," said Louis d'Hendecourt, head of the research team. "Up to now, no convincing explanation has been given [for] this observation."
If the group's theories prove correct, up to 10 percent of the dust that envelops these stars could be diamonds.
LATEST NEWS
- Quantum Brilliance Raises $20M
Jan 16, 2025
- Scalable Error-Correction Signals Forthcoming Efficiency Gains for Quantum Compute
Jan 16, 2025
- Fraunhofer CAP Appoints Head, Scientific Director: People in the News: 1/15/25
Jan 15, 2025
- Bioluminescent Tags Track RNA Dynamics in Live Cells in Real Time
Jan 15, 2025
- Sensing and Inspection Specialist EVK Joins Headwall Group
Jan 14, 2025
- PHOTON IP Raises $4.9M Seed Round
Jan 14, 2025
- Graphene Prevents Damage to Flexible Thin Films for Wearable Electronics
Jan 14, 2025
- Thorlabs Acquires VCSEL Developer, Longtime Partner Praevium Research
Jan 13, 2025