| Building blocks of life found around star HR 4796A |
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| by William Atkins | |
| Wednesday, 09 January 2008 | |
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Page 2 of 2 Earth no longer contains tholins because oxygen deletes them very rapidly. However, it is assumed that tholins were present in the early formation of the Earth, before oxygen came so abundant on our planet.
“We combine HST/NICMOS imaging photometry of the HR 4796A disk at previously unobserved wavelengths between 1.71-2.22\micron with reprocessed archival observations to produce a measure of the dust's scattering efficiency as a function of wavelength. The spectrum of the dust, synthesized from the seven photometric measures, is characterized by a steep red slope increasing from 0.5 \micron to 1.6 \micron followed by a flattening of the spectrum at wavelengths $>$ 1.6 \micron. We fit the spectrum with a model population of dust grains made of tholins, materials comprised of complex organic materials seen throughout the outer parts of our Solar System. The presence of organic material around a star that may be in the later stages of giant planet formation implies that the basic building blocks for life may be common in planetary systems.”
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