Water in Interstellar Clouds Forms Around Dust Grains
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Written by SerenaStargazer
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Sunday, 22 June 2008 |
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Models of interstellar clouds show that it is unlikely for
all of the water in them to have been produced by the combination of hydrogen
gas and oxygen gas. Most of the water in interstellar clouds forms icy sheets
around tiny grains of dust in these clouds. Akira Kouchi and colleagues at
Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan have tested the theory that oxygen atoms
accumulate on the grains and react with hydrogen to form water.
Kouchi’s team froze oxygen onto a nucleation surface held
at 10 degrees above absolute zero. They
fired atoms of hydrogen onto the oxygen, creating hydrogen peroxide. The
hydrogen peroxide then reacted with more hydrogen, producing water. The quick rate
at which these reactions occurred explains the amount of water that is found in
interstellar clouds.
Paola
Casselli at the University of Leeds has noted that the Kouchi’s team used oxygen
molecules containing two oxygen atoms, but single oxygen atoms are more common
in interstellar clouds.
www.planetsurveyor.com
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