Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
International

Mysteries of space dust unlocked

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Aug, 2014 07:34 AM
    A new analysis of space dust has revealed that the cosmic particles, wich are likely to have originated from beyond our solar system, are more complex in composition and structure than previously imagined.
     
    The dust analysis was carried out after a special collector onboard NASA's Stardust mission sent it back to earth for study in 2006.
     
    The analysis tapped a variety of microscopy techniques including those that rely on synchrotron radiation.
     
    "Synchrotrons are extremely bright light sources that enable light to be focused down to the small size of these particles while providing unprecedented chemical identification," explained Hans Bechtel, a principal scientific engineering associate at Berkeley Lab.
     
    "Fundamentally, the solar system and everything in it was ultimately derived from a cloud of interstellar gas and dust," said Andrew Westphal, physicist at the University of California, Berkeley's Space Sciences Laboratory.
     
    "The analysis of these particles captured by Stardust is our first glimpse into the complexity of interstellar dust, and the surprise is that each of the particles are quite different from each other," informed Andrew Westphal, a physicist at University of California, Berkeley's Space Sciences Laboratory.
     
    This method provided an important screening tool for differentiating the origin of each particle, researchers noted.
     
    The paper was published in the journal Science.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Antarctic fish might survive ocean warming: Study

    Antarctic fish might survive ocean warming: Study
    A species of Antarctic fish might be able to survive the predicted warming of its native waters over the next century if the warming is gradual enough, according to...

    Antarctic fish might survive ocean warming: Study

    MH17 black boxes arrive in Britain

    MH17 black boxes arrive in Britain
     The two black boxes of the crashed Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 arrived in Britain Wednesday for analysis, Ukraine's investigation commission said....

    MH17 black boxes arrive in Britain

    Fighting in Gaza will end 'in very near future': UN chief

    Fighting in Gaza will end 'in very near future': UN chief
    UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said Tuesday that he believed his talks with world leaders will lead to an end to the ongoing fighting between Israel and Hamas "in the very near future"....

    Fighting in Gaza will end 'in very near future': UN chief

    China's super collider a game changer?

    China's super collider a game changer?
    A proposal by China to build a "Higgs factory" by 2028 - a 52 km underground ring that would smash together electrons and positrons - has raised the possibility...

    China's super collider a game changer?

    UN warns of possible Israeli war crimes in Gaza

    UN warns of possible Israeli war crimes in Gaza
    UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay Wednesday warned that Israeli military attacks on Gaza could constitute a war crime, as the...

    UN warns of possible Israeli war crimes in Gaza

    Research questions satellite data over Antarctic sea expansion

    Research questions satellite data over Antarctic sea expansion
    The Antarctic sea ice may not be expanding as fast as previously thought, a new research suggests, adding that there may be a processing error in the satellite data...

    Research questions satellite data over Antarctic sea expansion