Category: Olivine Rain

  • The Value of Infrared Telescopes

    “Infrared telescopes such as Spitzer and now Herschel are providing an exciting picture of how all the ingredients of the cosmic stew that makes planetary systems are blended together,” said Bill Danchi, senior astrophysicist and program scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington. The Spitzer observations were made before it used up its liquid coolant in…

  • Jets Transport Crystals Through Solar Systems

    Poteet and his colleagues say this scenario could still be true but speculate that jets might have lifted crystals into the collapsing cloud of gas surrounding our early sun before raining onto the outer regions of our forming solar system. Eventually, the crystals would have been frozen into comets. The Herschel Space Observatory, a European…

  • Forsterite Crystals

    The crystals are in the form of forsterite. They belong to the olivine family of silicate minerals and can be found everywhere from a peridot gemstone to the green sand beaches of Hawaii to remote galaxies. NASA’s Stardust and Deep Impact missions both detected the crystals in their close-up studies of comets. “If you could somehow transport yourself inside…

  • Temperatures as Hot as Lava

    “You need temperatures as hot as lava to make these crystals,” said Tom Megeath of the University of Toledo in Ohio. He is the principal investigator of the research and the second author of a new study appearing in Astrophysical Journal Letters. “We propose that the crystals were cooked up near the surface of the…

  • Descending Olivine Crystals

    Tiny crystals of a green mineral called olivine are falling down like rain on a burgeoning star, according to observations from NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope. This is the first time such crystals have been observed in the dusty clouds of gas that collapse around forming stars. Astronomers are still debating how the crystals got there, but the most likely…