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Cosmic dust

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

The Horsehead Nebula is a beautiful cloud of dust and gas in space, shaped like a seahorse.

Cosmic dust, also called extraterrestrial dust, space dust, or star dust, is tiny particles found in outer space or that have fallen to Earth. Most of these particles are very small, ranging from just a few molecules to about 0.1 mm across. Cosmic dust can be found in many places, such as between galaxies, inside star systems, and around planets.

Porous chondrite dust particle

We can learn about dust far from our Solar System by watching the sky with special tools like photometry, polarimetry, and infrared spectroscopy. Closer to home, we can collect space dust directly. For example, the Stardust spacecraft gathered dust from a comet and brought samples back to Earth in 2006.

In our Solar System, dust from planets like Mars, moons like lunar regolith, and objects such as asteroids and comets creates the beautiful glow known as the zodiacal light. Every year, thousands of tons of cosmic dust reach Earth, with most grains being very tiny. Much of the dust in space comes from stars and contains minerals like silicates and graphite.

Study and importance

Artist's impression of dust formation around a supernova explosion.

Cosmic dust used to make it hard for astronomers to see stars and other objects. But when scientists used infrared light, they learned that dust is very important for making stars and planets.

Dust helps stars lose mass near the end of their lives. It also helps in the early steps of creating new stars and is part of what makes planets.

Studying cosmic dust connects many areas of science, like physics, chemistry, and astronomy. Dust particles change in their chemical makeup, shape, and movement. This cycle is like how we recycle materials—making, storing, using, collecting, and throwing away. By looking at dust in different places, such as around stars or in our Solar System, scientists can learn more about how the Universe recycles material. This helps us understand the journey of dust from its beginning to its end.

Detection methods

Cosmic dust of the Andromeda Galaxy as revealed in infrared light by the Spitzer Space Telescope.

We can study cosmic dust in many ways. Scientists use tools that look at the light from dust, like measuring the Zodiacal light. They also collect dust directly from the air or from places like ice in Antarctica and the deep sea.

NASA uses special planes to catch dust particles in the atmosphere. We can also find clues in meteorites, which contain pieces from stars called stardust. Spacecraft carry instruments to study dust particles flying through space. These instruments measure what happens when dust hits them at high speeds.

Cosmic dust of the Horsehead Nebula as revealed by the Hubble Space Telescope.

Infrared light can pass through dust clouds, helping us see inside areas where stars are born. NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope was good at seeing this kind of light before the James Webb Space Telescope was launched.

In 2019, scientists found dust from outside our solar system in Antarctica by looking for special materials in the samples.

Radiation properties

When dust particles meet light and energy from stars, they react in special ways. How they react depends on the size of the dust, what it's made of, and the type of light or energy.

Dust can bounce or change the path of light. Light that moves only a little bit from its original path is called forward-scattered light. Light that bounces back toward its source is called back-scattered light. By studying how dust changes light, scientists can learn about the size and nature of the dust particles.

In pictures taken over long periods, the way dust scatters visible light can be clearly seen in special cloudy areas of space called reflection nebulae. Scientists also study how dust affects X-ray light from stars, which can help them understand more about the dust in space.

Presolar grains

Main article: Presolar grains

Presolar grains are tiny pieces found inside meteorites. They are special because they were made before the Earth existed. Scientists study them to learn about stars and how elements were created.

These grains are made from strong materials that can survive very high temperatures, like silicon carbide and graphite. They have unique mixes that help scientists find out which stars they came from. Some grains even come from star explosions called supernovae. Studying these grains helps us learn how stars live and change over time.

Some bulk properties

Major elements of 200 stratospheric interplanetary dust particles.

Cosmic dust is made of tiny grains and clumps called particles. These particles come in different shapes and can be fluffy or compact. Their makeup, size, and other traits depend on where they are found. For example, dust in dense clouds often has a layer of ice and is usually bigger than dust floating in open space. Particles called interplanetary dust are usually the largest of all.

Most of the space material that reaches Earth comes from small rocks called meteoroids. These are between 50 to 500 micrometers across. They have an average density of 2.0 g/cm3 and contain about 40% empty space. In circumstellar dust, scientists have found traces of molecules like CO, silicon carbide, and water ice. Cometary dust is different from asteroidal dust, with cometary dust sharing traits with dust found between stars, including silicates and water ice. The makeup of cosmic dust can also change over time based on the available elements.

Dust grain formation

For the first time, the NASA / ESA / Canadian Space Agency / James Webb Space Telescope has observed the chemical signature of carbon-rich dust grains at redshift z ≈ 7, which is roughly equivalent to one billion years after the birth of the Universe, this observation suggests exciting avenues of investigation into both the production of cosmic dust and the earliest stellar populations in our Universe.

Big pieces of space dust are made of complicated materials. They start inside stars and then grow layers as they move through cold gas and dust clouds. These starting pieces are mostly minerals from cool, giant stars. Some also form during big star explosions called supernovae.

Scientists study dust particles to learn where they come from. They look at special infrared light signals to find different types of dust, like silicate dust from oxygen-rich stars or silicon carbide dust from carbon-rich stars. Most dust in our solar system has changed over time from the material that formed the solar system. Some dust comes straight from stars and hasn't changed much. Recent observations found dust in very early galaxies, showing that dust formed soon after the universe began.

From the solar nebula to Earth

The arrows in the diagram show how tiny particles from space can travel back to the early days of our solar system.

Some of these particles, called chondritic interplanetary dust particles, are grouped based on how much they have changed. They include carbon-rich particles, ordinary ones, and special ones called enstatite chondrites. The carbon-rich ones hold important elements and organic compounds, suggesting they formed early in the solar system's life. These particles have never been very hot, keeping their original material.

Scientists think that complex molecules needed for life might have formed around the sun before Earth existed. These molecules could have helped create life on our planet and maybe on others too. Studies show that certain chemicals can change into more complex ones under space-like conditions, which might be a step toward forming the building blocks of life.

Some "dusty" clouds in the universe

The Shark Nebula is a dark cloud reflection nebula in the constellation Cepheus.

Our Solar System has its own interplanetary dust cloud, and other star systems do too. Space has many cloudy areas, each forming in different ways. These include diffuse nebula, infrared (IR) reflection nebula, supernova remnant, molecular cloud, HII regions, photodissociation regions, and dark nebula.

These cloudy areas glow differently based on the energy they produce. For example, H II regions, like the Orion Nebula, where new stars are born, shine with heat. Supernova remnants, such as the Crab Nebula, glow because of energy moving at very high speeds, called synchrotron radiation.

Some well-known dusty areas in space are found in the Messier catalog, including M1, M8, M16, M17, M20, M42, and M43.

Dust sample return

The Stardust mission began on 7 February 1999. It aimed to collect tiny pieces from around the comet Wild 2 and bits of space dust. The mission brought these samples back to Earth on 15 January 2006. In 2007, scientists announced they had found pieces of dust from between the stars in these samples.

Dust particles on Earth

In 2017, scientists studied tiny pieces of space dust that land on Earth. They collected pieces from rooftops in cities like Oslo and Paris. These pieces are made of special rock and change shape when they enter Earth’s atmosphere. In the UK, scientists look for these pieces on cathedral rooftops, such as Canterbury Cathedral and Rochester Cathedral. A lot of space dust falls to Earth every year.

Images

A stunning night sky view showing the zodiacal light, airglow, and the Milky Way galaxy, with a photographer capturing the scene in the Chilean desert.
This image shows the dusty debris disc surrounding the star Fomalhaut, revealing three nested belts of dust discovered by the James Webb Space Telescope.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Cosmic dust, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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