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ID134916
Title ProperFrom the atom to the universe
Other Title Informationrecent astronomical discoveries
LanguageENG
AuthorOstriker, Jeremiah P
Summary / Abstract (Note)Astronomy starts at the point to which chemistry has brought us: atoms. The basic stuff of which the planets and stars are made is the same as the terrestrial material discussed and analyzed in the first set of essays in this volume. These are the chemical elements, from hydrogen to uranium. Hydrogen, found with oxygen in our plentiful oceanic water, is by far the most abundant element in the universe; iron is the most common of the heavier elements. All the combinations of atoms in the complex chemical com- pounds studied by chemists on Earth are also possible components of the objects that we see in the cosmos. Although almost all of the regions that we astronomers study are so hot that the more complicated compounds would be torn apart by the heat, some surprisingly unstable organic molecules. such as cyanopolyynes. have been detected in cold regions of space with very low density of matter. Nevertheless. the astronomical world is simpler than the chemical world of the laboratory or the real biological world.
`In' analytical NoteDaedalus Vol.143, No.4; Fal.2014: p.67-70
Journal SourceDaedalus Vol: 143 No 4
Standard NumberChemistry


 
 
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