Health
Are comets responsible for 'abundant' presence of water on Earth?
字号+ Author:Smart News Source:Business 2025-01-12 01:45:26 I want to comment(0)
The reananalysis of “rubber-ducky” comet's data, which was collected nearly a decade ago, suggested that comets may have deposited a lot more water on Earth than scientists thought previously. In the past decade, the idea that water was delivered by comets to early Earth has fallen out of favour. However, a new look at data from the European Space Agency's (ESA) Rosetta mission to an iconic “rubber ducky” comet has reopened that possibility, reported . It is important to note that water has a pretty simple chemical makeup. It has just three atoms — two hydrogen and one oxygen — in each molecule. Moreover, with our planet's oceans brimming with about a million trillion tonnes of the liquid, it’s also one of Earth’s most abundant molecules. Though, it has remained a mystery how all of this water ended up on Earth. According to some scientists, although Earth's geological processes may have generated a tiny fraction of it, most water was likely deposited by comets or asteroids via repeated, cataclysmic collisions. Earth's D/H ratio is similar to those of many asteroids and a handful of Jupiter-family comets, as per the research over the past few decades. Additionally, the comets from the Jupiter-family are a group of comets that swing past the sun roughly every 20 years and whose paths are tweaked by Jupiter's gravity.
1.This site adheres to industry standards, and any reposted articles will clearly indicate the author and source;
Related Articles
-
First adolescent, youth-friendly space inaugurated in Quetta
2025-01-12 01:17
-
Space One's second Kairos rocket launch fails 10 minutes after liftoff
2025-01-12 00:50
-
OpenAI announces restructuring plan to create public benefit corporation, raise capital
2025-01-11 23:28
-
‘We can block VPNs but we won’t do it', says PTA chairman
2025-01-11 23:26
User Reviews
Recommended Reads
Hot Information
- US driver flying Daesh flag rams into New Orleans crowd, killing 15
- OpenAI turns up heat on Google with global launch of ChatGPT search
- SpaceX makes last launches of 2024
- OpenAI turns up heat on Google with global launch of ChatGPT search
- Health ministry in Gaza says conflict death toll at 44,330
- Telegram promotes extremism, new study reveals
- Nasa declares spacecraft 'safe' after record-breaking Sun approach
- Are comets responsible for 'abundant' presence of water on Earth?
- Trump scheduled to be sentenced in hush money case before inauguration
Abont US
Follow our WhatasApp account to stay updated with the latest exciting content