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Tip
Sheet: Science & Technology

Tip sheets highlight timely news and events at Washington University in St. Louis. For more information on any of the stories below or for assistance in arranging interviews, please see the contact information listed with each story. For comments on the Science & Technology news tips service, please contact the editor, Tony Fitzpatrick at (314) 935-5272 or tony_fitzpatrick@aismail.wustl.edu.
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New way to study history of the universe

Media assistance:
Tony Fitzpatrick
- (314) 935-5272
Source: Scott
Messenger's Web Site
Related: Further
information about stardust
Related: McDonnell
Center for Space Science

[St.
Louis, Mo., March 2003] - For
the first time, scientists have
identified and analyzed single
grains of silicate stardust in
the laboratory. This breakthrough,
reported in the Feb. 27 issue
of Science Express, provides
a new way to study the history
of the universe.
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This classic anhydrous porous "fluffy" interplanetary dust particle (IDP) is the type in which reseachers at Washington University in St. Louis and NASA found stardust. This particle is about 10 micrometers (a micrometer is one milliont of a meter) across; the stardust grain the researchers found is about the size of just one of the little grains that make up the fluffy IDP. |
Astronomers
have been studying stardust through
telescopes for decades,
said first author Scott Messenger,
Ph.D., senior research scientist
in the Laboratory for Space Sciences
at Washington University in St.
Louis. And they have derived
models of what it must be like,
based on wiggles in their spectral
recordings. But they never dreamed
it would be possible to look this
closely at a grain of stardust
that has been floating around
in the galaxy.
Most stardust is made of tiny
silicate grains, much like dust
from rocks on earth. Away from
city lights, you can see the dust
as a dark band across the Milky
Way. This dust comes from dying
and exploded stars. Scientists
think stars form when these dust
clouds collapse and that some
of this dust became trapped inside
asteroids and comets when our
own sun formed.
The researchers found the stardust
in tiny fragments of asteroids
and cometsinterplanetary
dust particles (IDPs) collected
20 kilometers above the earth
by NASA planes. A typical IDP
is a mishmash of more than 100,000
grains gleaned from different
parts of space. Until recently,
ion probes had to analyze dozens
of grains at one time and so were
able to deduce only the average
properties of a sample.
In 2001, with help from NASA and
the National Science Foundation,
Washington University bought a
newly available and much more
sensitive ion probe. Made by Cameca
in Paris, the NanoSIMS probe can
resolve particles as small as
100 nanometers in diameter. A
million such particles side by
side would make a centimeter.
The grains in IDPs range from
100 to 500 nanometers. So
like the Hubble telescope, the
NanoSIMS allows us to see things
on a much finer scale than ever
before, Messenger said.
Lindsay P. Keller, Ph.D., at NASAs
Johnson Space Center in Houston,
first examined thin slices of
IDPs under the transmission electron
microscope. He identified the
chemical elements in single grains
and determined whether the grains
were crystals or coated with organic
material.
Using the NanoSIMS probe, the
Washington University investigators
then measured the relative amounts
of two isotopes of oxygen in more
than a thousand grains from nine
IDPs. The data told them which
grains had come from stars. The
researchers discovered the first
grain of stardust in the first
half hour of their first NanoSIMS
session. Finding something
that people have been seeking
for such a long time was incredibly
exciting, Messenger said.
Stardust was surprisingly common
in the IDPs. We found that
1 percent of the mass of these
interplanetary dust particles
was stardust, Messenger
explained. So stardust is
about 50 times as abundant in
these particles as in meteorites,
which suggests that it comes from
far more primitive bodies.
The isotopic measurements identified
six stardust grains from outside
our solar system. Three appeared
to have come from red giants or
asymptotic giant branch stars,
two late stages in stellar evolution.
A fourth was from a star containing
little metal. The fifth and sixth
possibly came from a metal-rich
star or a supernova.
Although this work is just beginning,
some novel findings have emerged.
For example, one of the grains
was crystalline, which contradicts
the idea that silicate stardust
grains are always amorphous. A
single grain of stardust can bring
down a long-established theory,
Messenger said.
The researchers will probe the
history of stardust with further
studies of IDP chemistry and microstructure.
The interstellar medium
plays an incredibly important
role in star formation, but you
can learn only so much by using
a telescope, Messenger said.
You can find out so much
more by studying actual samples.
Messenger S, Keller LP, Stadermann
FJ, Walker RM, Zinner E. Samples
of stars older than the sun:
Silicate grains in interplanetary
dust. Science Express,
Feb. 27, 2003. http://www.sciencemag.org/feature/express/expresstwise.shl
A grant from NASA funded this
research.
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