GPS News  
Little Bang Triggered Solar System Formation

"This is the first time a detailed model for a supernova triggering the formation of our solar system has been shown to work," said Alan Boss. "We started with a Little Bang 9 billion years after the Big Bang."
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Oct 06, 2008
For several decades, scientists have thought that the Solar System formed as a result of a shock wave from an exploding star-a supernova-that triggered the collapse of a dense, dusty gas cloud that contracted to form the Sun and the planets. But detailed models of this formation process have only worked under the simplifying assumption that the temperatures during the violent events remained constant.

Now, astrophysicists at the Carnegie Institution's Department of Terrestrial Magnetism (DTM) have shown for the first time that a supernova could indeed have triggered the Solar System's formation under the more likely conditions of rapid heating and cooling.

The results, published in the October 20, 2008, issue of the Astrophysical Journal, have resolved this long-standing debate.

"We've had chemical evidence from meteorites that points to a supernova triggering our Solar System's formation since the 1970s," remarked lead author, Carnegie's Alan Boss.

"But the devil has been in the details. Until this study, scientists have not been able to work out a self-consistent scenario, where collapse is triggered at the same time that newly created isotopes from the supernova are injected into the collapsing cloud."

Short-lived radioactive isotopes-versions of elements with the same number of protons, but a different number of neutrons-found in very old meteorites decay on time scales of millions of years and turn into different (so-called daughter) elements.

Finding the daughter elements in primitive meteorites implies that the parent short-lived radioisotopes must have been created only a million or so years before the meteorites themselves were formed.

"One of these parent isotopes, iron-60, can be made in significant amounts only in the potent nuclear furnaces of massive or evolved stars," explained Boss. "Iron-60 decays into nickel-60, and nickel-60 has been found in primitive meteorites. So we've known where and when the parent isotope was made, but not how it got here."

Previous models by Boss and former DTM Fellow Prudence Foster showed that the isotopes could be deposited into a pre-solar cloud if a shock wave from a supernova explosion slowed to 6 to 25 miles per second and the wave and cloud had a constant temperature of -440 degreesF (10 K).

"Those models didn't work if the material was heated by compression and cooled by radiation, and this conundrum has left serious doubts in the community about whether a supernova shock started these events over four billion years ago or not," remarked Harri Vanhala, who found the negative result in his Ph.D. thesis work at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in 1997.

Using an adaptive mesh refinement hydrodynamics code, FLASH2.5, designed to handle shock fronts, as well as an improved cooling law, the Carnegie researchers considered several different situations.

In all of the models, the shock front struck a pre-solar cloud with the mass of our Sun, consisting of dust, water, carbon monoxide, and molecular hydrogen, reaching temperatures as high as 1,340 degreesF (1000 K).

In the absence of cooling, the cloud could not collapse. However, with the new cooling law, they found that after 100,000 years the pre-solar cloud was 1,000 times denser than before, and that heat from the shock front was rapidly lost, resulting in only a thin layer with temperatures close to 1,340 degreesF (1000 K).

After 160,000 years, the cloud center had collapsed to become a million times denser, forming the protosun. The researchers found that isotopes from the shock front were mixed into the protosun in a manner consistent with their origin in a supernova.

"This is the first time a detailed model for a supernova triggering the formation of our solar system has been shown to work," said Boss. "We started with a Little Bang 9 billion years after the Big Bang."

Related Links
Carnegie Institution
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Stellar Still Births
Bonn, Germany (SPX) Oct 03, 2008
The systematics of celestial bodies apparently needs to be revised. Researchers at the Argelander Institute of Astronomy of the University of Bonn have discovered that brown dwarfs need to be treated as a separate class in addition to stars and planets.







  • Researchers Scientists Perform High Altitude Experiments
  • Airbus expecting 'large' China order by early 2009: CEO
  • Airbus globalises production with China plant
  • Safer Skies For The Flying Public

  • Electric vehicles spark at Paris car show
  • Nissan uses bumblebee power in new car technology
  • Toyota says curbing production in China
  • Device Which Uses Electrical Field Could Boost Gas Efficiency

  • Airman Provides Air Support For Army Battlespace
  • The Modern Airborne Military Communications Market
  • Boeing Ships Software-Defined FAB-T Radio Prototype
  • DataPath Wins Suppport Contract For US CENTCOM SatComm Hubs

  • Russia Eyes New Customers For Iskander E Missile
  • Swords and Shields: Iran's missile allies
  • US missile defenses in Europe in US interest: Obama advisor
  • Venezuela To Spend One Billion Dollar Russian Loan On Air Defense

  • Mars, Nestle pull product in SKorea over milk scandal: official
  • China tries to contain tainted milk fallout
  • Milk scandal leaves sour aftertaste for China's White Rabbit sweets
  • Melamine found in Nestle milk products: minister

  • Haiti's hurricane death toll more than doubles to 793
  • Wetlands Restoration Not A Panacea For Louisiana Coast
  • Fraudsters prosecuted in Hurricane Katrina's wake
  • Outside View: Ike shows reform has worked

  • New Robotic Repair System Will Fix Ailing Satellites
  • High-School Team Tracks Spacecraft Breakup
  • Actel Adds DSP Capabilities To Industry-Leading RTAX Space FPGAs
  • New Research Shows Why Metal Alloys Degrade

  • iRobot Awarded US Army Contract For Robotic Systems
  • Robots Learn To Follow
  • Robot-assisted surgery repairs fistulas
  • Japanese Researchers Eye e-Skin For Robots

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement