[meteorite-list] NASA Simulator Successfully Recreates Space Dust

Ron Baalke baalke at zagami.jpl.nasa.gov
Wed May 7 18:32:13 EDT 2014



May 7, 2014
     
NASA Simulator Successfully Recreates Space Dust

A team of scientists at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif., 
has successfully reproduced, right here on Earth, the processes that occur in 
the atmosphere of a red giant star and lead to the formation of 
planet-forming interstellar dust.

Using a specialized facility, called the Cosmic Simulation Chamber (COSmIC) 
designed and built at Ames, scientists now are able to recreate and study in 
the laboratory dust grains similar to the grains that form in the outer 
layers of dying stars. Scientists plan to use the dust to gather clues to 
better understand the composition and the evolution of the universe.

Dust grains that form around dying stars and are ejected into the 
interstellar medium lead, after a life cycle spanning millions of years, to 
the formation of planets and are a key component of the universe's evolution. 
Scientists have found the materials that make up the building blocks of the 
universe are much more complicated than originally anticipated.

"The harsh conditions of space are extremely difficult to reproduce in the 
laboratory, and have long hindered efforts to interpret and analyze 
observations from space," said Farid Salama, project leader and a space 
science researcher at Ames. "Using the COSmIC simulator we can now discover 
clues to questions about the composition and the evolution of the universe, 
both major objectives of NASA's space research program."

In the past, the inability to simulate space conditions in the gaseous state 
prevented scientists from identifying unknown matter. Because conditions in 
space are vastly different from conditions on Earth, it is challenging to 
identify extraterrestrial materials. Thanks to COSmIC, researchers can 
successfully simulate gas-phase environments similar to interstellar clouds, 
stellar envelopes or planetary atmospheres environments by expanding gases 
using a cold jet spray of argon gas seeded with hydrocarbons that cools down 
the molecules to temperatures representative of these environments.

COSmIC integrates a variety of state-of-the-art instruments to allow 
scientists to recreate space conditions in the laboratory to form, process 
and monitor simulated planetary and interstellar materials. The chamber is 
the heart of the system. It recreates the extreme conditions that reign in 
space where interstellar molecules and ions float in a vacuum at densities 
that are billionths of Earth's atmosphere, average temperatures can be less 
than -270 degrees Fahrenheit (about 100 degrees Kelvin), and the environment 
is bathed in ultraviolet and visible radiation emanating from nearby stars.

"By using COSmIC and building up on the work we recently published in the 
Astrophysical Journal August 29, 2013, we now can for the first time truly 
recreate and visualize in the laboratory the formation of carbon grains in 
the envelope of stars and learn about the formation, structure and size 
distribution of stellar dust grains," said Cesar Contreras of the Bay Area 
Environmental Research (BAER) Institute and a research fellow at Ames. "This 
type of new research truly pushes the frontiers of science toward new 
horizons, and illustrates NASA's important contribution to science."

The team started with small hydrocarbon molecules that it expanded in the 
cold jet spray in COSmIC and exposed to high energy in an electric discharge. 
They detected and characterized the large molecules that are formed in the 
gas phase from these precursor molecules with highly sensitive detectors, 
then collected the individual solid grains formed from these complex 
molecules and imaged them using Ames' Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM).

"During COSmIC experiments, we are able to form and detect nanoparticles on 
the order of 10 nm size, grains ranging from 100-500 nanometers and 
aggregates of grains up to 1.5 micrometers in diameter, about a tenth the 
width of a human hair, and observe their structure with SEM, thus sampling a 
large size distribution of the grains produced," said Ella Sciamma-O'Brien, 
of the BAER Institute and a research fellow at Ames.

These results have important implications and ramifications not only for 
interstellar astrophysics, but also for planetary science. For example, they 
can provide new clues on the type of grains present in the dust around stars. 
That in turn, will help us understand the formation of planets, including 
Earth-like planets. They also will help interpret astronomical data from the 
Herschel Space Observatory, the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared 
Astronomy (SOFIA) and the ground-based Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter 
Array observatory in Chile.

"Today we are celebrating a major milestone in our understanding of the 
formation and the nature of cosmic dust grains that bears important 
implications in this new era of exoplanets discoveries," concluded Salama.

This work is funded through the Laboratory Astrophysics Carbon-in-the-Galaxy 
consortium program, an element of the Astrophysics Division's Astrophysics 
Research and Analysis program in NASA's Science Mission Directorate at NASA 
Headquarters in Washington and is supported by Ames' Advanced Studies 
Laboratories, a partnership between Ames and the University of California in 
Santa Cruz.

For more information about COSmIC, visit:

http://go.nasa.gov/ioHkeS 

For more information about Ames, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/ames 

-end-

J.D. Harrington
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-5241
j.d.harrington at nasa.gov 

Rachel Hoover
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.
650-604-4789
rachel.hoover at nasa.gov 



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