A doctoral student recreated a tiny piece of the universe in a bottle to investigate the chemistry that led to life on Earth.
A doctoral student from the University of Sydney’s School of Physics re-created a little bit of the universe in a bottle.
Recreating cosmic dust may help answer questions about how meteorites hitting Earth came to contain the organic matter that they do ...
A Sydney Ph.D. student has recreated a tiny piece of the universe inside a bottle in her laboratory, producing cosmic dust ...
The process broke down the chemical compounds, forming new elements—carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen—essential components for life. The newly minted homebrew space dust settled in a thin layer ...
Linda Losurdo, a doctoral student at the University of Sydney, successfully simulated star-like conditions to produce cosmic ...
By creating a 'little bit of the Universe in a bottle' in her lab, a PhD student in physics has reverse-engineered the ...
The NASA mission, called Stardust, brought back the only material—other than moon rocks—taken directly from a extraterrestrial body. NASA At the threshold of a sterile lab at NASA's Johnson Space ...
Space dust provides more than just awe-inspiring pictures like the Pillars of Creation. It can provide the necessary materials to build everything from planets to asteroids. But what it actually looks ...
Cold cosmic dust grains can link amino acids into protein‑like chains in deep space, suggesting life’s chemistry may begin ...