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Ancient Neutron-Star Crash Made Enough Gold and Uranium to Fill Earth's Oceans
Space.com ^ | May 8, 2019 | Charles Q. Choi

Posted on 05/13/2019 7:30:37 PM PDT by ETL


Enough gold, uranium and other heavy elements about equal in mass to all of Earth's oceans likely came to the solar system from the collision of two neutron stars billions of years ago, a new study finds.

If the same event were to happen today, the light from the explosion would outshine the entire night sky, and potentially prove disastrous for life on Earth, according to the new study's researchers.

Recent findings have suggested that much of the gold and other elements heavier than iron on the periodic table was born in the catastrophic aftermath of colliding neutron stars, which are the ultradense cores of stars left behind after supernova explosions. 

"The first directly detected neutron-star merger happened 130 million light-years away, which may sound like a large distance, but was much closer than anticipated," study lead author Imre Bartos, an astrophysicist at the University of Florida, Gainesville, told Space.com.

"This made me and my colleagues think about how close to us such events might happen. Could they happen near the solar system?"

The researchers analyzed previous data from ancient meteorites whose origins date back to the early solar system, which formed about 4.6 billion years ago. They focused on traces of radioactive isotopes left in the meteorites that a neutron-star collision would have likely produced. (Isotopes of an element have different numbers of neutrons from each other.)

The kind of relatively short-lived radioactive isotopes a neutron-star merger would have generated are no longer present in the solar system. However, previous work deduced what byproducts would have resulted after those isotopes decayed over time.

The scientists analyzed the abundances of these byproducts in ancient meteorites in order to deduce when they were created, and thus when their parent isotopes might have entered the solar system. They also developed computer models of the Milky Way to see where a neutron-star collision might have occurred to seed the solar system with these isotopes.

The researchers found a vast amount of heavy elements in the solar system likely originated from a single neutron-star collision that occurred about 80 million years before the birth of the solar system.

Based on the amount of material from this merger that managed to make it here, they suggested this merger happened about 1,000 light-years from the cloud of gas and dust that eventually formed the solar system. (In comparison, the Milky Way galaxy is about 100,000 light-years in diameter.)

"We didn't expect that one event would contribute most of the heavy elements found in the early solar system," Bartos said.

This ancient neutron-star merger would have seeded the solar system with about 1.1 billion billion tons (1 billion billion metric tons) of these heavy elements, such that "in each of us, we would find an eyelash worth of these elements, mostly in the form of iodine, which is essential to life," Bartos said in a statement.

Other phenomena can generate elements heavier than iron on the periodic table, such as the stellar explosions known as supernovas. However, these would generate different patterns of elements than seen in ancient meteorites, Bartos said.

If this neutron-star merger were to happen today at the same distance from Earth, the researchers found that at the very least "it would be brighter than all the night sky put together — as bright as the crescent moon, squeezed into one point," Bartos said.

"It would be bright enough to be seen during daytime, brighter than anything but the sun. It would have lasted about a week."

However, if Earth had the misfortune to face either pole of the black hole that resulted from this neutron-star collision, it would prove a disaster. Soon after the merger occurred, a giant explosion known as a gamma-ray burst would erupt from the poles of the newborn black hole.

Although it would last only about a second, "the gamma-ray burst would emit more energy than the sun will radiate during its entire lifetime," Bartos said.

If the gamma-rays from such an outburst were to hit Earth, they would get absorbed by the upper atmosphere, generating ultraviolet rays.

"A nearby gamma-ray burst would result in a mass extinction," Bartos said.

"Luckily, neutron-star mergers only happen roughly every 100,000 years in the Milky Way, and ones that happen nearby do so less often, so we are not in any immediate danger in any way."

The scientists now want to investigate how often neutron-star mergers occurred in the past in the Milky Way "and understand how they influenced the evolution of the galaxy," Bartos said.

Bartos and his colleague Szabolcs Marka at Columbia University in New York detailed their findings online May 1 in the journal Nature.


TOPICS: Astronomy; Chit/Chat; Science
KEYWORDS: astronomy; catastrophism; gammaraybursts; gold; heavymetals; neutronstar; preciousmetals; science; supernova; uranium; xplanets
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"A neutron star is so dense that one teaspoon of its material would have a mass
over 5.5×10^12 kg (900 times the mass of the Great Pyramid of Giza)

Related image

In the enormous gravitational field of a neutron star, that teaspoon of material
would weigh 1.1×10^25 N (about 15 times what the Moon would weigh if it
were placed on the surface of the Earth
)

The entire mass of the Earth at neutron star density would fit into a sphere
of 305m [~3 football fields] in diameter
."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutron_star#Density_and_pressure

_________________________________________________________

Neutron star

A neutron star is the collapsed core of a giant star which before collapse had a total mass of between 10 and 29 solar masses.[bet 10-29 mass of the Sun]

Neutron stars are the smallest and densest stars, not counting black holes, hypothetical white holes, "quark stars" and "strange stars".[1]

Neutron stars have a radius on the order of 10 kilometres (6.2 miles) and a mass lower than 2.16[2] solar masses.[3]

They result from the supernova explosion of a massive star, combined with gravitational collapse, that compresses the core past white dwarf star density to that of atomic nuclei.

Once formed, they no longer actively generate heat, and cool over time; however, they may still evolve further through collision or accretion.

Most of the basic models for these objects imply that neutron stars are composed almost entirely of neutrons (subatomic particles with no net electrical charge and with slightly larger mass than protons); the electrons and protons present in normal matter combine to produce neutrons at the conditions in a neutron star.

Neutron stars are partially supported against further collapse by neutron degeneracy pressure, a phenomenon described by the Pauli exclusion principle, just as white dwarfs are supported against collapse by electron degeneracy pressure. ..."

There are thought to be around 100 million neutron stars in the Milky Way, a figure obtained by estimating the number of stars that have undergone supernova explosions.[16]

However, most are old and cold, and neutron stars can only be easily detected in certain instances, such as if they are a pulsar or part of a binary system.

Slow-rotating and non-accreting neutron stars are almost undetectable; however, since the Hubble Space Telescope detection of RX J185635−3754, a few nearby neutron stars that appear to emit only thermal radiation have been detected.

Soft gamma repeaters are conjectured to be a type of neutron star with very strong magnetic fields, known as magnetars, or alternatively, neutron stars with fossil disks around them.[17]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutron_star

1 posted on 05/13/2019 7:30:37 PM PDT by ETL
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Simulated view of a neutron star. Due to its strong gravity, the background is
gravitationally lensed, making it appear distorted.
2 posted on 05/13/2019 7:30:56 PM PDT by ETL (REAL Russia collusion! New Updates on Dem-Russia collusion via Ukraine! Click ETL)
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To: ETL

Whoa... thats some heavy shit man!...


3 posted on 05/13/2019 7:37:53 PM PDT by sit-rep
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To: sit-rep

Heavy Metal


4 posted on 05/13/2019 7:45:08 PM PDT by Army Air Corps (Four Fried Chickens and a Coke)
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To: ETL

If they start mining that gold, gold will become worthless rather quickly. It might increase at first but if there is as much gold as they claim then it will not be as scarce. Supply and demand will crush it’s value.


5 posted on 05/13/2019 7:48:38 PM PDT by Robert DeLong
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To: ETL

The way things happened, are as if they were purposely done, to result in what we have now.

Evidence of God and Creation.


6 posted on 05/13/2019 7:55:29 PM PDT by Alas Babylon! (The media is after us. Trump's just in the way.)
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To: Robert DeLong

True, but we would be wiping with gold leaf and wearing gold chain...


7 posted on 05/13/2019 8:01:32 PM PDT by Pikachu_Dad ("the media are selling you a line of soap)
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To: Robert DeLong

That’s a lot of gold.

Also a lot of space. I’m guessing that you could dig most anywhere and find gold if you got something to measure it in parts per trillion.

Same as any gold mine - it is only profitable if you can find it in concentrations compared to the expense. I think it needs to be some fraction of an ounce per ton of waste rock to make a mine worthwhile.


8 posted on 05/13/2019 8:05:14 PM PDT by 21twelve (!)
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To: Robert DeLong

“. It might increase at first but if there is as much gold as they claim then it will not be as scarce.”

I think you misunderstand.


9 posted on 05/13/2019 8:13:17 PM PDT by TexasGator (Z1z)
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To: sit-rep; 21twelve; Pikachu_Dad; Alas Babylon!; Robert DeLong; Army Air Corps

How Gravitational Waves Led Astronomers to Neutron Star Gold

By Ian O'Neill
October 17, 2017

The origin of the universe's heaviest elements has mystified scientists, but after Monday's (Oct. 16) historic announcement of the detection of gravitational waves produced by two colliding neutron stars, astronomers have struck gold — literally.  

Researchers know that stars fuse light atomic nuclei to create heavier nuclei. Elements in the universe heavier than hydrogen (but lighter than iron) are created by a process known as stellar nucleosynthesis: nuclear reactions that occur deep inside stars' cores. But it has been a long-standing mystery as to where in the universe elements heavier than iron are synthesized, researchers said in a statement from the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics (MPA) in Germany.

Though astrophysicists have theorized processes for how heavy elements like gold, platinum and lead are created in the cosmos, observational evidence has been scarce — until now.

[Gravitational Waves from Neutron Star Crashes: The Discovery Explained]

"The origin of the really heaviest chemical elements in the universe has baffled the scientific community for quite a long time," Hans-Thomas Janka, a senior scientist at MPA, said in the statement. "Now, we have the first observational proof for neutron star mergers as sources; in fact, they could well be the main source of the r-process elements," which are elements heavier than iron, like gold and platinum.

After black holes, neutron stars are the densest known objects in the universe. Each is the size of a city, with a mass greater than that of Earth's sun; a teaspoon of this dense material would therefore weigh a billion tons. Neutron stars are created after stars more massive than Earth's sun explode as supernovas, leaving behind superdense magnetized balls of spinning matter composed mainly of neutrons, neutral particles that, along with protons, are found inside atomic nuclei. 

Neutron stars therefore contain some of the building blocks of atomic nuclei. If these neutrons are somehow released from a neutron star, they might undergo reactions that allow them to stick together, creating elements heavier than iron.

For this process to work, however, it must be rapid, the researchers said. 

Newly formed particles will be highly unstable and will lose neutrons, radioactively decaying into lighter particles. But if the surrounding environment is dense in free neutrons, more neutrons can be captured before the nuclei will decay, so heavier and heavier elements can be formed. And if a neutron star smashes into another neutron star, clumps of neutrons are blasted into space and can rapidly synthesize heavy elements like gold via a mechanism called rapid neutron capture process, or "r-process," according to an article released Oct. 16 in the journal Nature.

So, when astronomers confirmed the detection of the gravitational wave signal GW170817 that emanated from the site of a gamma-ray burst in a galaxy 130 million light-years away, they realized they were looking at an intense cosmic collision called a "kilonova." This was a ripe environment for the r-process to take place, the researchers said. Kilonovas are powerful explosions that unleash gamma-rays and have been long theorized to occur when neutron stars collide. 

By comparing observations made using the Hubble Space Telescope and Gemini Observatory with theoretical models, astronomers have now confirmed that the r-process occurs in kilonovas, observing the spectroscopic fingerprint of heavy elements being created in the explosion's afterglow. 

Researchers are witnessing a distant heavy-element factory synthesizing "maybe hundreds of Earth masses' [worth] of gold and … maybe 500 Earth masses' worth of platinum," theoretical astrophysicist Daniel Kasen, of the University of California, Berkeley, said in a new video

With the help of the new gravitational wave signal, researchers now estimate that neutron star collisions may be responsible for the creation of most of the r-process heavy elements, like gold, found in galaxies, the Nature article said. 

So, to paraphrase famed astronomer Carl Sagan, while we may be made of "star stuff," the ring on your finger is made of "neutron star stuff."

https://www.space.com/38493-gravitational-waves-neutron-star-gold.html

10 posted on 05/13/2019 8:14:32 PM PDT by ETL (REAL Russia collusion! New Updates on Dem-Russia collusion via Ukraine! Click ETL)
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To: ETL

Pure speculation. They get paid for this? I am from Missouri.


11 posted on 05/13/2019 8:21:40 PM PDT by Fungi
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To: sit-rep; 21twelve; Pikachu_Dad; Alas Babylon!; Robert DeLong; Army Air Corps

How much gold has been mined?

The best estimates currently available suggest that around 190,040 tonnes of gold has been mined throughout history, of which around two-thirds has been mined since 1950.

And since gold is virtually indestructible, this means that almost all of this metal is still around in one form or another.

If every single ounce of this gold were placed next to each other, the resulting cube of pure gold would only measure around 21 metres [~69 feet] on each side.

https://www.gold.org/about-gold/gold-supply/gold-mining/how-much-gold

____________________________________________

Ancient Neutron-Star Crash Made Enough Gold and Uranium to Fill Earth's Oceans


12 posted on 05/13/2019 8:23:11 PM PDT by ETL (REAL Russia collusion! New Updates on Dem-Russia collusion via Ukraine! Click ETL)
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To: Pikachu_Dad

LOL


13 posted on 05/13/2019 8:26:05 PM PDT by Robert DeLong
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To: TexasGator

No I understand perfectly, but if large quantities are found close enough to make it profitable then a glut would become the reality. I personally do not believe it would be profitable enough, so I think for the most part it’s a pipe dream. The initial outlay would be enormous and the cost to retrieve it would be huge as well. But if enough gold were mined it would start to lower its value as the supply increased even 3 fold of what we have mined thus far. The more that was mined would mean continuously decreasing profit margins. It’s is like any other commodity that is subject to the laws of supply & demand. The reality is I will most likely never see these increases in my lifetime, as I am definitely on the far side of the down slope already. 8>)


14 posted on 05/13/2019 8:40:00 PM PDT by Robert DeLong
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To: ETL

I learned all that I need to know about neutron stars from Larry Niven. Ha ha


15 posted on 05/13/2019 8:41:37 PM PDT by ChildOfThe60s (If you can remember the 60s........you weren't really there)
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To: Pikachu_Dad; Robert DeLong
True, but we would be wiping with gold leaf and wearing gold chain...


Image result for "coming to america"


gifs website




gifs website

(Clap Clap)... "Wipers!"

16 posted on 05/13/2019 8:41:51 PM PDT by ETL (REAL Russia collusion! New Updates on Dem-Russia collusion via Ukraine! Click ETL)
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To: Robert DeLong

“No I understand perfectly, but if large quantities are found close enough to make it profitable then a glut would become the reality. “

You don’t understand. The only quantities close enough are under your feet.


17 posted on 05/13/2019 8:57:07 PM PDT by TexasGator (Z1z)
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To: sit-rep; 21twelve; Pikachu_Dad; Alas Babylon!; Robert DeLong; Army Air Corps
From the “How The Earth Was Made” documentary series...

Check out the “Carlin Trend” at the 27:16 mark of the ~45 min doc.

Season 2, episode 13: America’s Gold
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6baHoiV6ltg

_____________________________________________________

Below is a transcript for this portion of the show...

Season 2, episode 13: America’s Gold: "Carlin Trend" approximately the 27:16 mark:

“Nevada’s hot-spring gold deposits yielded over 40 million ounces of gold and 500 million ounces of silver, but by 1920, Nevada’s gold seams were increasingly uneconomical to mine. The desert became littered with ghost towns. It looked like America had run out of gold.

But in 1961, a new type of deposit was found. But it couldn’t be seen or touched. It was invisible. It would become the biggest strike in the history of America’s gold.

America’s gold was concentrated by incredible mountain-building forces that formed California, and volcanic processes deep beneath Nevada’s hot springs. But as the deposits became exhausted, geologists frantically searched for new stashes of gold.

Then in 1961, geologist and gold prospector John Livermore noticed a suspicious [50-mile crack] in the middle of Nevada called the Carlin Trend and set out to investigate.

John Livermore came to these hills following up a theory that gold deposits would be aligned directly above a deep crack in the Earth’s crust. He’d come up to outcrops like this, and he would go ahead and want to look at them.

The rocks are a strange mixture of mud and quartz, a mineral created in hot fluid and a good clue that gold might be deposited nearby. Based on his experience, he knew a lot of hot fluid had come up this crack.

However, he couldn’t see any evidence of gold, no quartz veins, no visible gold.

But on a hunch, he sampled this rock, took it back to the assay lab to see if there was any gold in it.

In assay labs, rocks are crushed and blasted in a furnace to over 1,800 degrees. And as the liquid rock cools, the minerals begin to separate.

At the end of this process, something extraordinary has happened.

An ordinary-looking rock actually contained a grain of gold at a concentration of about 5,000 times you would normally see in the Earth [crust].

It doesn’t look like much, but this is what they mine every day.

Livermore’s hunch paid off. The Carlin Trend is now one of the largest mining districts in the world.

The vast man-made pit is big enough to be seen from space.

This is the BetzePpost pit, one of the world’s largest gold mines.
It contains 45 million ounces of gold. They have to mine to get one ounce out.

As you can see, it’s huge— Because gold is so valuable, the extraction of just a few thousand ounces a day pays for this extraordinary mining operation. And removing the gold ore requires drastic action.

[explosion] Wow. That’s what 400,000 pounds of explosives looks like.

Giant diggers work 24 hours a day excavating over, enough to cover Central Park in 55 feet of rubble.

But within this raw gold ore, not a speck of gold has ever been seen with the naked eye.

The mystery is, where’s the gold?

You can’t see it. The rocks look really ordinary. The clue to where this gold is hidden is in the internal structure of this rock.

Magnified 500 times, the gold is still invisible.

But this rock is an extraordinary lattice of quartz and mud perforated with strange cavities. It looks like a honeycomb, like something’s eaten away at it. Clearly some strange geologic process has concentrated and hidden the gold in the rock.

Scientists realized if they were going to solve the puzzle of how gold came to be hiding in these rocks, first they would have to understand where the rocks came from.

A clue was found in the 19th century by cattle rancher Absalom Lehman in the eastern reaches of Nevada.

In 1885, Absalom Lehman stumbled upon a hole in the ground, and with rope and lantern, he lowered himself in the Earth and discovered this beautiful cave system with some of the most spectacular [limestone] cave formations in the world.

The solid foundations of this cave are made of a messy mixture of mud and calcium carbonate shells.

They are the remains of tiny sea creatures, evidence that Nevada was once covered by an ancient tropical sea.

For millions and millions of years, creatures with shells composed of calcium carbonate began to rain down through the ocean and accumulate on the sea floor forming this calcareous ooze.

Later, this ooze hardened into a sedimentary rock called limestone.

These extraordinary structures in the cave were formed when water eroded the huge limestone bed that sits underneath Nevada.

And back over at the Carlin Trend, scientists noticed that the gold ore was made of a very similar type of rock.

They figured out that the Lehman Cave limestone and Carlin Trend gold ore must once have been the same rock.

Clearly something happened to change this rock into this spongy gold-bearing ore.

Well, the clue is in the chemical reactivity of this limestone.

If I put dilute hydrochloric acid on this limestone, note how it fizzes. Very reactive. The acid is eating away at the rock.

Now if I put the acid on the spongy gold ore, no reaction. The fluid is soaking into the rock like a sponge.

Scientists concluded the reason Carlin Trend gold ore did not fizz is that it had already been attacked by an acid.

Beneath the bed of limestone at Carlin is a gigantic vertical crack.

Geologists now believe that a blast of hot, acidic gold-rich fluid was once forced upwards from deep within the Earth.

It streamed through the crack, drenching the limestone.

The acid ate into it, leaving a sponge-like muddy framework behind.

And in the cavities, it dumped quartz and the most minute sprinklings of gold.

It’s only been very recently that scientists have been able to use even more sophisticated imaging equipment—microscopy— to image down to the scale of individual atoms.

Magnified 100,000 times, tiny specks of submicroscopic gold can be seen embedded in the rock.

Zooming in further a staggering 4 million times, the gold particle is finally revealed.

This fleck of gold is only one-millionth the size of a pinhead, and each tiny white dot is an individual gold atom.

These ordinary-looking rocks have produced 65 million ounces of gold from a single crack in the Earth known as the Carlin Trend, and it’s made the United States the fourth largest gold producer in the world.

Scientists investigating how Nevada’s gold ore formed have found a sponge-like rock structure, suggesting that something ate away at the limestone, and gold ore not reacting with acid, evidence that an acidic fluid had already attacked the limestone, showering it with minute particles of gold.

Similar Carlin-type deposits have since been discovered yielding a further [35 million ounces of gold]

Yet these discoveries may only be the tip of the iceberg.

Geologists are now using state-of-the-art equipment, hoping to unlock millions of ounces of American gold trapped deep beneath the Nevada desert.

Throughout world history, over 5 billion ounces of gold have been recovered by man, and almost 1/10th of this has been found in California and Nevada, adding up to a staggering $280 billion worth of bounty. How much remains is anyone’s guess. ...”

Read more: https://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/view_episode_scripts.php?tv-show=how-the-earth-was-made-2009&episode=s02e13

18 posted on 05/13/2019 9:08:53 PM PDT by ETL (REAL Russia collusion! New Updates on Dem-Russia collusion via Ukraine! Click ETL)
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To: 21twelve

Not buying it. The heavy metals would’ve been disbursed very thinly. I would guess the leftover remnants of a nearby supernova.


19 posted on 05/13/2019 9:11:18 PM PDT by Hoosier-Daddy ("Washington, DC. You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy. We must be cautious")
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To: TexasGator

I did a project at a very rich gold mine in a remote area of Indonesia. The stuff they were putting in their waste piles was at the same percentage of what we mine in the USA!

But - it was so expensive to get it from the mine down to the port, and then onto ships to the processing plants (in Japan??) it wasn’t worth it. Only the high-grade stuff made it.

Even if one-pound nuggets of gold were scattered across the surface of the moon it probably wouldn’t be cost-effective to bring it back to earth. For sure not if they were on Mars.

I’m guessing a pound of water on Mars would be worth more than a pound of gold too!


20 posted on 05/13/2019 9:14:10 PM PDT by 21twelve (!)
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