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posted by CoolHand on Saturday December 12 2015, @10:17PM   Printer-friendly
from the cosmic-incongruity dept.

Something strange was hiding in the Horsehead. The nebula, named for its stallionlike silhouette, is a towering cloud of dust and gas 1,500 light-years from Earth where new stars are continually born. It is one of the most recognizable celestial objects, and scientists have studied it intensely. But in 2011 astronomers from the Institute of Millimeter Radioastronomy (IRAM) and elsewhere probed it again. With IRAM's 30-meter telescope in the Spanish Sierra Nevada, they homed in on two portions of the horse's mane in radio light. They weren't interested in taking more pictures of the Horsehead; instead, they were after spectra—readings of the light broken down into their constituent wavelengths, which reveal the chemical makeup of the nebula. Displayed on screen, the data looked like blips on a heart monitor; each wiggle indicated that some molecule in the nebula had emitted light of a particular wavelength.

Every molecule in the universe makes its own characteristic wiggles based on the orientation of the protons, neutrons and electrons within it. Most of the wiggles in the Horsehead data were easily attributable to common chemicals such as carbon monoxide, formaldehyde and neutral carbon. But there was also a small, unidentified line at 89.957 gigahertz. This was a mystery—a molecule completely unknown to science.

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-hunt-for-alien-molecules/

It has always amazed me that people can only imagine life, and matter, as it exists on earth. Given molecules that can't exist on earth, it is easy to imagine life forms that we might not even recognize as "alive". While some general laws of physics probably apply throughout the universe, we need to keep in mind that there may be exceptions to those laws, and that local conditions might twist the laws far outside our understanding. C3H+ ?? Who would have guessed!


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  • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Saturday December 12 2015, @11:34PM

    by JoeMerchant (3937) on Saturday December 12 2015, @11:34PM (#275609)

    I doubt that the 89.957GHz emitter can't exist on Earth. I suppose I should read the article and see what the SETI angle is. Naaaah.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 12 2015, @11:40PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 12 2015, @11:40PM (#275610)

    ...it just doesn't want to exist on Earth.

    The signal is a message from the Androsynth who fled the Earth to escape from evil female creatures. When translated the message says "Ghey iz best! Hetero is eww."

  • (Score: 2) by Fluffeh on Sunday December 13 2015, @09:41PM

    by Fluffeh (954) Subscriber Badge on Sunday December 13 2015, @09:41PM (#275860) Journal

    It is a molecule that in Earth's conditions would be too unstable and immediately break and recombine with the surrounding matter. Due to the region where they found the signature, these molecules simply don't collide with other molecules enough to be broken apart. In this case it was C3H+, propynylidynium. It has been made on earth, and the signature was proven to be correct, but it would not be found naturally here on earth.

    • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Tuesday December 15 2015, @01:03AM

      by JoeMerchant (3937) on Tuesday December 15 2015, @01:03AM (#276442)

      Thanks, I did eventually break down and RTFA, and I suppose when you're looking out in space you should expect to see things like that which are "unstable in a crowded place" - but, really, when you consider the whole volume of the universe, which is more rare: Earthlike conditions, or Deep Space like conditions? As they said, they just weren't thinking logically about it at first.

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