Regina Leader-Post

COSMIC CLASH PRODUCES GOLD.

SCIENTISTS RECORD COLLISION OF NEUTRON STARS, WHICH CAN PRODUCE ENERGY TO FORM PRECIOUS METALS

- SARAH KNAPTON in London

The secret of creating gold has fascinated alchemists for thousands of years, but now scientists have finally solved the mystery.

Precious metals are forged in the cataclysmi­c collisions of neutron stars and then flung out into the universe where they eventually aggregate with other stardust into larger bodies, such as planets.

Previously scientists had theorized that such cosmic smashes could create the vast amount of energy needed to create gold, platinum and silver, but for the first time, they have actually recorded it happening.

On Aug. 17, astronomer­s in the U.S. picked up a signal from two neutron stars crashing together 130 million years ago, when dinosaurs still roamed the Earth.

The impact, known as a “kilonova” was so powerful that it shook not only space but also time, sending ripples — or gravitatio­nal waves — through the fabric of the universe.

After the ripple was detected on Earth, astronomer­s across the world pointed their telescopes to the area of space from which it had originated and soon also picked up the infrared afterglow from the collision. Inside that light were the distinct chemical signatures for gold, silver and platinum.

Dr. Joe Lyman, of the University of Warwick, who was observing at the European Southern Observator­y in Germany, was the first to alert the scientific community to the fact they were witnessing a completely new event.

“The observatio­ns showed we were observing a kilonova, an object whose light is powered by extreme nuclear reactions,” he said. “This tells us that the heavy elements, like the gold or platinum in jewelry, are the cinders, forged in the billion-degree remnants of a merging neutron star.”

Neutron stars are created when giant stars die in spectacula­r supernovas. Their cores collapse, allowing protons and electrons to meld together to form neutrons, creating small yet incredibly dense stars. Just a teaspoon of neutron star material would have a mass of about a billion tons.

The two stars, which were detected in August, were as heavy as our sun, yet only 10 kilometres across. They existed in a galaxy called NGC 4993. The pair drew towards each other over millions of years, and revolved around each other increasing­ly quickly as they got closer — eventually spinning around each other 500 times per second, until they crashed, forming either a larger neutron star or collapsing into a black hole. The space-time ripples created by the collision were detected by the Advanced Laser Interferom­eter Gravitatio­nal-Wave Observator­y in Washington and Louisiana (LIGO).

It was here the first discovery of gravitatio­nal waves was made in September 2015, confirming a prediction made by Albert Einstein 100 years ago and earning three pioneers of the project a Nobel Prize. Professor David Wiltshire, of the department of physics and astronomy at the University of Canterbury, said: “The first discovery of gravitatio­nal waves from the merger of two neutron stars is a historic event.

“It is every bit as exciting as the first discovery of gravitatio­nal waves from merging black holes. Since this involves neutron stars that radiate light, for the first time we can also see what is going on in an extreme astronomic­al event that shakes up space-time.”

Dr. JJ Eldridge, an astrophysi­cist at the University of Auckland, added: “We’re all made of stardust, but gold, silver and platinum are made of neutron stardust.

“In this particular event, it’s likely that hundreds or thousands of Earth masses of gold and other elements were made. If the rate of neutron star mergers is as high as we now think, these dying stars are now the source of most of these elements in the universe.”

The discovery has also solved the mystery of what creates shortwave gamma ray bursts which are picked up on Earth and could help pinpoint how fast the universe is expanding.

Dr. Samantha Oates, of Warwick’s astronomy and astrophysi­cs group added: “This discovery has answered three questions that astronomer­s have been puzzling for decades — what happens when neutron stars merge? What causes the short duration gamma ray bursts? Where are the heavy elements, like gold, made?

“In the space of about a week all three of these mysteries were solved.”

The new findings were published in research papers in the journals Nature, Nature Astronomy and Science.

 ?? AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Above is an artist’s depiction of two tiny but dense neutron stars at the point at which they merge and explode as a “kilonova.” Scientists have for the first time witnessed the smash-up of two such ultra-dense neutron stars.
AFP / GETTY IMAGES Above is an artist’s depiction of two tiny but dense neutron stars at the point at which they merge and explode as a “kilonova.” Scientists have for the first time witnessed the smash-up of two such ultra-dense neutron stars.

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