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Home / Science / Space Dust: Cosmic Catalyst for Life's Building Blocks

Space Dust: Cosmic Catalyst for Life's Building Blocks

24 Nov

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Summary

  • Space dust acts as a catalyst, facilitating complex molecule formation.
  • Reactions between common space molecules form life precursors on dust.
  • Dust chemistry is essential for creating molecular building blocks in space.
Space Dust: Cosmic Catalyst for Life's Building Blocks

New research indicates that particles of space dust are vital for generating the foundational molecules required for life. Scientists from Heriot-Watt University, in collaboration with teams in Germany and the US, have demonstrated that mineral dust acts as a catalyst.

This catalytic effect allows simple molecules, such as carbon dioxide and ammonia prevalent in space, to transform into more complex, potentially life-forming compounds. Their study, published in The Astrophysical Journal, found these surface reactions efficiently produce ammonium carbamate, a key chemical precursor to molecules essential for life, but only when dust is present.

The findings suggest that dust grains are far more active in astrochemistry than previously understood. These particles may provide the necessary micro-environments within interstellar clouds and protoplanetary disks for molecules to meet and evolve, overcoming space's harsh conditions to initiate the chemistry that could lead to life.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Space dust acts as a catalyst, providing surfaces for common molecules like carbon dioxide and ammonia to react and form more complex, life-essential compounds.
The study found that mineral dust is crucial for efficient surface reactions that create precursors to life's molecules, even in extreme cold and vacuum.
While not directly creating life, dust chemistry is a prerequisite for making the molecular building blocks that could eventually lead to life.

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