Scientists found one of the largest carbon-based space molecules ever. Here's why that's a big deal
"By learning more about how these molecules form and are transported in space, we learn more about our own solar system and so, the life within it."
Astronomers have discovered one of the largest carbon-based molecules found in deep space, located within the Taurus molecular cloud, 430 light-years from Earth. The finding is significant because it provides further clues that might help solve a longstanding mystery in astrochemistry: Where does carbon, the building block of life, come from?
The molecule, called pyrene, is made up of four fused planar rings of carbon. It's therefore categorized as a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) — one of the most abundant complex molecules in the visible universe. PAHs were first detected in the 1960s, in meteorites known as carbonaceous chondrites, which are remnants from the primordial nebula that formed our solar system.
"One of the big questions in star and planet formation is how much of the chemical inventory from that early molecular cloud is inherited and forms the base components of the solar system?" Brett McGuire, an assistant professor of chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said in a statement.
PAHs are thought to make up roughly 20% of the carbon found in space and are present at different stages in the life of stars, from their formation to their death. Their stability and resilience to ultraviolet (UV) radiation makes them likely to survive even in the harsh conditions of deep space.
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The researchers say they began searching for pyrene and other PAHs in the Taurus cloud after pyrene was found in high levels in samples collected from the near-Earth asteroid Ryugu. Finding these molecules in the birthplace of our solar system provides a direct link astronomers have long been searching for.
"What we're looking at is the start and the end, and they're showing the same thing," said McGuire. "That's pretty strong evidence that this material from the early molecular cloud finds its way into the ice, dust and rocky bodies that make up our solar system."
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The discovery was made using radio astronomy, a major subfield of astronomy that observes celestial objects, such as stars, planets, galaxies and clouds of dust, in the radio spectrum. By studying the radio waves originating from these sources, astronomers can learn about the compositions, structures and motions of particular targets.
Compared to other instruments used to identify molecules in space, radio telescopes offer the ability to observe individual molecules as opposed to general molecular groups. They do this by detecting the unique "fingerprints" of electromagnetic radiation a molecule emits or absorbs at specific frequencies where each molecule has a distinct set of rotational and vibrational energy levels. Characteristic radio waves are generated when the molecule transitions between these levels.
"This is now the seventh individual PAH identified in space since we first found one in 2021," said Ilsa Cooke, assistant professor in the UBC department of chemistry. "[PAHs] have similar chemical structures to the building blocks of life. By learning more about how these molecules form and are transported in space, we learn more about our own solar system and so, the life within it."
The astronomers estimated that pyrene accounted for about 0.1% of the carbon found in the cloud. "That is an absolutely massive abundance. An almost unbelievable sink of carbon. It’s an interstellar island of stability," said McGuire.
What was even more intriguing to the team, aside from finding pyrene in the origin place of our solar system, is the fact that the temperatures of the cloud were measured to be only 10 Kelvin (-263 degrees Celsius). On Earth, PAHs are formed during high temperature processes, namely through the combustion of fossil fuels. Finding them in this cold environment was therefore surprising. "Future work aims to explore whether PAHs can form somewhere that’s extremely cold, or whether they arrive from elsewhere in the universe, potentially via the death throes of an old star," said Cooke.
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A chemist turned science writer, Victoria Corless completed her Ph.D. in organic synthesis at the University of Toronto and, ever the cliché, realized lab work was not something she wanted to do for the rest of her days. After dabbling in science writing and a brief stint as a medical writer, Victoria joined Wiley’s Advanced Science News where she works as an editor and writer. On the side, she freelances for various outlets, including Research2Reality and Chemistry World.
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Classical Motion What is the molecule’s velocity? It’s important to start measuring the velocities of any molecules in space. Velocity seems to nullify EM and G forces for isolated charge in the solar wind. We need to compare velocities of these molecules, if possible.Reply -
Torbjorn Larsson Carbon based compounds, "organics", production is ubiquitous in the universe, starting with carbon stars atmospheres and on. As long carbon (and the rest of the so called CHNOPS compounds) is supplied to habitable environments, evolution will presumably do the rest as it did on Earth.Reply
What does it matter for transport, after the molecule formed? The PAHs are often formed in cold molecular clouds, the clouds that can form stars, so they don't move fast within the clouds. At a few K, most molecules would move ~100 m/s. The clouds typically move with a few km/s in relation to the typical 200 km/s orbital speed of the Milky Way disk. https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/earth-and-planetary-sciences/molecular-clouds ]Classical Motion said:What is the molecule’s velocity? It’s important to start measuring the velocities of any molecules in space. Velocity seems to nullify EM and G forces for isolated charge in the solar wind.
The solar wind does not come into it, but the protons that constitute most of it has typical velocity ranges of 250 - 750 km/s. The escape velocity for Sun is ~ 600 km/s, so some solar wind is not "nullified" but will escape to interstellar space. -
Classical Motion I think my comments about particles has been misunderstood. I think that Sol’s particle atmosphere and Sol’s solar wind are two different dynamics. And two different configurations.Reply
I think the atmosphere has a particle density gradient. Two things about this gradient. It’s a lot less dense than the surface. This allows higher velocities to be had, before collision. Or before field interactions. So, even though the atmosphere is rare, it’s a lot hotter than the surface. And also the atmosphere has an angular spacial density.
By some unknown stimulus, a portion of this atmosphere escapes and is constantly accelerated out beyond Neptune. No one has come up with a reason for this acceleration. No one knows where this acceleration ends. 99% of the wind is raw charge, 50/50 charge. This is an actual mass loss for all stars. Not just light loss. These charges appear to be inert. They are in close proximity to opposite charges and do not attack or repel. And they have mass, but are accelerated away from Sol for months.
These are NOT just the high speed particles. These are under a constant increasing force.
And apparently inert to EM and G. I am referring to the wind, not ejections. It would be interesting to see what a gamma shine would do to them. But raw charge wouldn’t emit light, only x-ray and gamma.
Being that raw charge has net charge, and a magnetic dipole, I would assume the acceleration is electrical. In some fashion. But for neutral matter, like molecules, I would assume that the only acceleration force would be gravity. And have much slower velocities.
Super novas are said to explain high velocity matter, and high atomic number mass. I doubt this. Today we have many instruments 24/7 and responsive, and have only proven that super novas are very rare. Cosmic rays, high speed nuclei, are all over the place. And if other bodies have the same percentages of heavy atoms like earth, it wouldn’t account for them.
And if this wind would ever get slowed down, the formation of H1(dipoles) would emit some EM and we should detect it. A glow of some kind.
And that’s why I think that atomic clouds or molecular clouds should be much slower than the wind. And can be interacted with. Speed and angle determine interaction time, and interaction requires some time.
If the fast charge remains at velocity and inert, then there is a lot less mass and gravity in the cosmos than there used to be. The cosmos is dissolving. Quantum dissolving.
The density of fast charge, thru-out the cosmos, would be very difficult to detect and measure. Our detectors and concepts are for gas molecules. The star wind is quantum molecules.
We might have a quantum shield around our system. We might need it.
But I’m no expert and just spitball.