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Did Water Crash Into Earth From Space?

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Channel: Seeker
Categories: Astronomy   |   Chemistry   |   Science  
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Did water crash into Earth from space by way of a massive comet, or was it around long before our planet's formation? Well, one new study suggests that it might have actually come from the most unlikely source of all: the Sun.
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Between oceans, glaciers, polar ice caps, and lakes, watery goodness covers almost 71% of Earths surface. And thats pretty special Earth is the only one of the rocky planets in our solar system with this much water. So when it comes to BIG questions, one of the biggest is where did Earths water originally come from? One new study says maybethe Sun? But to get there, we gotta start a little further back. For decades, planetary scientists and astrobiologists have been building two competing hypotheses for just how Earth got so gosh dang WET.

Option one: Water was inside the Earth when it formed in the first place. The idea goes that minerals in the mantle of our ancient, primordial Earth stored hydrogen and oxygen. When those minerals melted in the natural course of geothermal activity, the hydrogen and oxygen dissolved together in the magma as water. When that magma got spewed out onto Earths surface via volcanoes, the water came too. Alternatively, maybe those elements stored in Earths minerals were vaporized by an impact from some comet or asteroid possibly even the BIG impact we think created our moon! Those vaporized elements combined and settled on the Earths surface, resulting in our life-giving liquid.

But option two is an answer that doesnt come from so close to home. Many scientists think that water was just chillin on comets, meteorites, asteroids, etc out in space. When these guys crashed into ushey presto, water on Earth! Where this gets a little sticky though, is the numbers. Scientists have studied the remnants of asteroids and meteorites that crashed into us wayyyyy back at our planets beginning. These do contain certain kinds of hydrogen, what are called isotopes. But the ratio of the hydrogen isotopes on these ancient astrophysical bodies doesnt match the ratio in our oceans today. To get the right ratio, the water from these crashed objects would have needed to mix with another, lighter isotope of hydrogen for us to get the kind of water we have today.

#Seeker #Science #Elements #Earth #Space #water

Read More:

Asteroid analysis suggests some of Earth's water came from the Sun
https://newatlas.com/space/earths-water-came-from-sun-asteroid/
"Accounting for where all of the Earth's water came from is a longstanding puzzle, but an international team of scientists led by the University of Glasgow has proposed that the Sun may be a major source of our planet's HO, by way of hydrogen from the solar winds."

Earth's Water Was in The Solar System Before Earth Itself, Meteorite Reveals
https://www.sciencealert.com/new-study-finds-earth-s-water-was-around-in-the-solar-system-before-earth-was
"The minerals and ratios in the Efremovka meteorite revealed that, in the first 200,000 years of our Solar System's history, before the planetesimals (that's planet seeds) formed, two large gas reservoirs existed. One of these reservoirs contained the solar gas from which the matter in the Solar System ended up condensing."

Why is there water on Earth?
https://theconversation.com/why-is-there-water-on-earth-153931
"...most of Earths water is deep underground: between one and ten times the volume of the oceans are contained in the mantle."

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