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The universe's water is almost as old as the Big Bang itself, shocking new study hints

The universe's water is almost as old as the Big Bang itself, shocking new study hints

Yahoo15-03-2025
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Water may have emerged in the universe far earlier than scientists thought — and it could mean that life could be billions of years older too, new research suggests.
Water is one of the most essential ingredients for life as we know it. But exactly when water first appeared has been a question of scientific interest for decades.
Now, new research suggests that water likely existed 100 million to 200 million years after the Big Bang — billions of years earlier than scientists previously predicted. The research was published March 3 in the journal Nature Astronomy.
The early universe was dry because it was mainly filled with very simple elements, like hydrogen, helium and lithium. Heavier elements didn't develop until the first stars formed, burnt through their fuel supplies and ultimately exploded. Such stellar explosions, known as supernovas, acted like pressure cookers that combined lighter elements into increasingly heavier ones.
"Oxygen, forged in the hearts of these supernovae, combined with hydrogen to form water, paving the way for the creation of the essential elements needed for life," study co-author Daniel Whalen, an astrophysicist at the University of Portsmouth in the U.K., said in a statement.
Related: 32 strange places scientists are looking for aliens
To determine when water first appeared, the researchers examined the most ancient supernovas, called Population III supernovas. Whalen and his team looked at models of two types of these early star remnants: core-collapse supernovas, when a large star collapses under its own mass; and pair-instability supernovas, when a star's interior pressure suddenly drops, causing a partial collapse.
The researchers found that shortly after the Big Bang, both supernova types produced dense clumps of gas that likely contained water.
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Overall, the amount of water in these gas clouds was probably pretty small — but it was concentrated in the areas where planets and stars were most likely to form, the team found. The earliest galaxies probably arose from these regions, which means that water may have already been in the mix when they formed.
"This implies the conditions necessary for the formation of life were in place way earlier than we ever imagined — it's a significant step forward in our understanding of the early Universe," Whalen said.
Observations from the James Webb Space Telescope, which is designed to view the universe's oldest stars, may help further validate these results.
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I Watched The First Two Episodes Of Alien: Earth, And Two Things Actually Stressed Me Out More Than The Xenomorphs
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I Watched The First Two Episodes Of Alien: Earth, And Two Things Actually Stressed Me Out More Than The Xenomorphs

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Alien: Earth's Premiere Is Wild, But We Asked The Cast To Tease The Rest Of The Season In One Word, And Their Responses Were Over-The-Top
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Hubble telescope uncovers rare star born from cosmic collision: 'A very different history from what we would have guessed'
Hubble telescope uncovers rare star born from cosmic collision: 'A very different history from what we would have guessed'

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Hubble telescope uncovers rare star born from cosmic collision: 'A very different history from what we would have guessed'

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope have discovered that a seemingly ordinary white dwarf star is actually the result of a dramatic stellar merger. This result, detailed in a new study led by Snehalata Sahu and Boris Gaensicke of the University of Warwick in the U.K., suggests that other "normal-looking" white dwarfs scattered throughout the universe could also have violent pasts. "It's a discovery that underlines things may be different from what they appear to us at first glance," Gaensicke, study co-author and a professor of physics at the University of Warwick who serves as the principal investigator of the Hubble program, said in a statement. "Until now, this appeared as a normal white dwarf, but Hubble's ultraviolet vision revealed that it had a very different history from what we would have guessed." The star, named WD 0525+526, is located about 128 light-years from Earth. Though it appeared rather standard at first glance through visible light, further observations using the Hubble telescope revealed telltale signs of a more turbulent origin, the new study reports. White dwarfs are the dense remnants of stars like our sun that have exhausted their fuel supplies and collapsed into Earth-size objects. Despite their small size, however, they can pack in up to 1.4 times the mass of the sun. Most white dwarfs form from the predictable evolution of single stars nearing the final days of their life cycles, which is a path our own sun is expected to follow in about 5 billion years. However, WD 0525+526 may have followed a very different path. Instead of forming from one dying star, it appears to have emerged from the violent collision and merger of two stars. This dramatic past, the new study says, left subtle but detectable fingerprints in the white dwarf's atmospheric makeup. When Gaensicke and his team examined WD 0525+526 with Hubble's ultraviolet instruments, they detected an unusual amount of carbon in the star's atmosphere — a key sign the star was formed in a merger. Typically, white dwarfs have outer layers of hydrogen and helium that obscure their carbon-rich cores. But in mergers such as this one, the intense collision can strip away much of these outer layers, allowing carbon to rise to the surface. The signals of such stars are difficult to detect in visible light, but become clearer in ultraviolet wavelengths — and that's where Hubble excels. WD 0525+526 is remarkable even among the small number of white dwarfs known to be merger remnants, according to the statement. It has a surface temperature of nearly 21,000 Kelvin (about 37,000 degrees Fahrenheit) and a mass 1.2 times that of the sun, making it both hotter and more massive than others in this rare category, the study notes. Because WD 0525+526 appeared completely normal in visible light, astronomers now suspect that many more white dwarfs could be hiding similar explosive origins. "We would like to extend our research on this topic by exploring how common carbon white dwarfs are among similar white dwarfs, and how many stellar mergers are hiding among the normal white dwarf family," Antoine Bedrad, a researcher at the University of Warwick who co-led the study, said in the statement. RELATED STORIES: — White dwarfs: Facts about the dense stellar remnants — White dwarfs are 'heavy metal' zombie stars endlessly cannibalizing their dead planetary systems — What is dark energy? Exploding white dwarf stars may help us crack the case "That will be an important contribution to our understanding of white dwarf binaries, and the pathways to supernova explosions." This research is described in a paper published Aug. 6 in the journal Nature Astronomy.

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