BIG BANG CONCEPT DISCOVERED IN SPACE
When the universe formed during the Big Bang
13.8 billion years ago, the chemical reactions of the aftermath formed the
first molecules. Those first molecules were crucial in helping form everything
we know, but they're also absent.
And although HeH+, the helium hydride ion,
has been proposed for years as that first molecule, scientists couldn't find
any evidence of its existence in space -- until now. The findings were
published Wednesday in the journal Nature.
After the Big Bang, HeH+ formed in a
molecular bond when helium atoms and protons combined. Later, these would break
apart into hydrogen molecules and helium atoms. Both elements are the two most
abundant throughout the universe, with hydrogen first and helium second.
Scientists were able to demonstrate the
molecular ion in a lab in 1925 and study it, which sparked a decades-long
search for HeH+ in space. "The chemistry of the universe began
with HeH+. The lack of definitive evidence of its very existence in
interstellar space has been a dilemma for astronomy for a long time," said
Rolf Güsten, study author and astronomer at the Max Planck Institute for
Radioastronomy, in a statement.
Astrochemical models in the late 1970s
pointed to a detectable possibility. This led scientists to believe that HeH+
might exist in the chaotic planetary nebula ejected by stars like our sun
during the last stage before they explode in a supernova.
The molecular ion is formed when the
radiation of the star, reaching temperatures more than 100,000 degrees, ionizes
the nebula.
But detecting the molecule's signal at its
strongest wavelength has been difficult. The opaqueness of Earth's atmosphere
rules out any ground-based telescopes.
So researchers used SOFIA, the Stratospheric
Observatory for Infrared Astronomy, a modified Boeing jet carrying a telescope
that can fly above the lower atmosphere.
A high-resolution spectrometer called GREAT
on board SOFIA detected the molecule in the planetary nebula NGC 7027.
"The discovery of HeH+ is a dramatic and
beautiful demonstration of nature's tendency to form molecules," said
David Neufeld, study co-author and professor in the Physics and Astronomy
Department at Johns Hopkins University, said in a statement.
"Despite the unpromising ingredients
that are available, a mixture of hydrogen with the unreactive noble gas helium,
and a harsh environment at thousands of degrees Celsius, a fragile molecule
forms. Remarkably, this phenomenon can not only be observed by astronomers but
also understood using theoretical models that we have developed."
Comments
Post a Comment