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Is water on Earth older than the Sun? Here’s the truth

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Apr 2, 2024, 09:00 IST
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Reshaping our perception of planetary formation

The revelation that Earth’s water may predate the sun challenges our understanding of the solar system’s history. Recent studies suggest that the water on our planet isn’t a product of the sun’s influence but rather a legacy from the cosmic environment that preceded it. This discovery reshapes our perception of planetary formation and the origin of life-sustaining compounds.

Image: Canva

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Cosmic heritage

Water is fundamental to life as we know it, and its cosmic journey began long before our sun ignited. Astronomers have traced water’s lineage back to the interstellar medium, the space between stars filled with gas and dust. The composition of water in this medium shares a remarkable similarity to that found on Earth, indicating a probable link that predates the solar system.

Image: Canva

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Interstellar ice

The key to this ancient origin lies in the ratio of hydrogen to deuterium, a heavier isotope of hydrogen, found in interstellar ice. The ratio of hydrogen to deuterium within this ice provides a unique signature of its formation environment. In the cold, dense regions of interstellar space, where temperatures can plummet to just a few degrees above absolute zero, chemical reactions proceed at a sluggish pace. Under these frigid conditions, deuterium is more likely to bond with oxygen to form water, resulting in a higher deuterium-to-hydrogen ratio than what is typically found on Earth. This enriched deuterium signature in interstellar ice suggests that much of the water in our solar system, including that on Earth, was formed in the cold interstellar medium and later incorporated into the solar nebula from which the sun and planets coalesced, remaining chemically unchanged throughout the process.

Image: Canva

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Protostellar clues

Observations of a young star, V883 Orionis, provided confirmation of this theory. This protostar, located 1,305 light-years away, revealed water with a deuterium-to-hydrogen ratio similar to that of our solar system’s water. This connection implies that the water surrounding V883 Orionis—and by extension, the water on Earth—originated in the interstellar medium.

Image: Canva

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Solar system formation

The formation of our solar system was a complex process that involved the accretion of material from the protoplanetary disk—a vast, rotating cloud of gas and dust surrounding the young sun. Within this disk, ancient water ice, which had formed in the cold, dense regions of interstellar space, was abundant. As the disk evolved, this interstellar ice, along with other dust and gas, began to coalesce under the force of gravity, forming the building blocks of planets and comets. This process effectively captured the water ice, with its unique deuterium-to-hydrogen ratio, and integrated it into the fabric of the nascent solar system. The fact that this water ice remained chemically unchanged during its incorporation suggests that the solar system’s water is a direct inheritance from the interstellar medium, providing a snapshot of the conditions that existed before the sun’s formation

Image: Canva

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Implications for exoplanets

This discovery has profound implications for the study of exoplanets. If water in our solar system is inherited from interstellar space, it’s likely that other planetary systems have also received significant amounts of water. This increases the potential for habitable worlds beyond our own.

Image: Canva

The search for life

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The search for life

Understanding the ancient origins of Earth’s water bolsters the search for life elsewhere in the universe. If water, a vital ingredient for life, is abundant and predates stars, then the building blocks for life may be more common than previously thought. This insight fuels the hope that we are not alone in the cosmos.

Image: Canva

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Final words

The concept that Earth’s water might be older than the sun invites us to look at the stars with a renewed sense of wonder. It suggests that the components for life are woven into the fabric of the universe itself, waiting to be uncovered by curious minds. As we continue to explore, we may find that our planet’s story is just one verse in an infinite cosmic song.

Image: Canva

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