
Breakthrough in hunt for ALIENS as scientists find treasure trove of ‘ingredients for life' near distant baby star
SPACE TRACE Breakthrough in hunt for ALIENS as scientists find treasure trove of 'ingredients for life' near distant baby star
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
THE key ingredients for life may be scattered across the universe in more places than first thought, according to a new study.
From prebiotic molecules in comets, to chemicals floating in the dust of interstellar space, scientists have traced the building blocks of life all across space.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
1
Instead of destroying these precious organic compounds, the star may actually be freeing them from these icy surfaces
Astronomers have recently discovered the key components to life swirling around a remote baby star roughly 1,300 light-years from Earth.
A protostar called V883 Orionis, tucked away in the constellation Orion, contains 17 complex organic molecules, including ethylene glycol and glycolonitrile.
These are the precursors to components found in DNA and RNA - which build all living things.
The study, published in the The Astrophysical Journal Letters, suggests the key components for life are far more common throughout the universe - offering a glimpse of hope for Earth's alien hunters.
While similar compounds have been discovered elsewhere in the cosmos, astronomers assumed it wouldn't be possible so close to a star.
The birth of stars is violent, emitting such a huge amount of energy that astronomers assumed these seeds of life would be obliterated.
It was thought that only the rare planetary systems - like Earth - would be capable of reproducing them.
"Now it appears the opposite is true," study co-author Kamber Schwarz, an astrochemist at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany, said in a statement.
"Our results suggest that protoplanetary discs inherit complex molecules from earlier stages, and the formation of complex molecules can continue during the protoplanetary disc stage."
Huge leap in search for aliens after 'building blocks for LIFE' found on ancient asteroid Bennu from lost watery world
Using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in northern Chile, scientists spotted emission lines from a cluster of organic molecules inside a debris and gas rich disk encircling V883 Orionis.
This is in spite of the baby star pumping out powerful bursts of radiation.
"These outbursts are strong enough to heat the surrounding disc as far as otherwise icy environments, releasing the chemicals we have detected," study first author Abubakar Fadul, a graduate student at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, added.
The organic compounds form on specks of ice in the debris and gas disk.
Instead of destroying these precious organic compounds, the star may actually be freeing them from these icy surfaces.
The researchers still need more data to see how well these compounds hold up as their host star grows.
"Perhaps we also need to look at other regions of the electromagnetic spectrum to find even more evolved molecules," Fadul said.
"Who knows what else we might discover?"
All you need to know about planets in our solar system
Our solar system is made up of nine planets with Earth the third closest to the Sun. But each planet has its own quirks, so find out more about them all... How old is Earth? Plus other facts on our planet
How many moons does Mercury have?
What colour is Venus?
How far away is Mars to Earth? And other facts on the red planet
How big is Jupiter?
How many moons does Saturn have?
Does Uranus have rings?
How many moons does Neptune have?
How big is Pluto?
How hot is the Sun?
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
a minute ago
- Scottish Sun
Stunning 2,500-year-old TATTOOS from Siberian ‘ice mummy' depicting ‘mythical creatures' revealed in perfect detail
The scans exposed "intricate, crisp and uniform" tattooing that could not be seen with the naked eye Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THE intricate tattoos of a 2,500-year-old Siberian "ice mummy" have finally been revealed through high-tech imaging. The designs reveal leopards, tigers, a stag, a rooster and even some long-lost mythical creatures. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 7 The tattoos belong to a woman, who has about 50-years-old when she died Credit: M Vavulin 7 On her right forearm, the woman had an image of leopards and tigers around the head of two deer Credit: Daniel Riday 7 The woman is thought to have belonged to the nomadic horse-riding Pazyryk culture, which roamed the lands between China and Europe Credit: Getty They are so detailed that even a modern tattooist would struggle to reproduce them, according to the researchers behind the discovery. The tattoos belong to a woman who was about 50-years-old when she died. She is thought to have belonged to the nomadic horse-riding Pazyryk culture, which roamed the lands between China and Europe. The scans exposed "intricate, crisp and uniform" tattooing that could not be seen with the naked eye. Over the two millennia, the ink has become all but invisible on the body as the skin darkens with time. "The insights really drive home to me the point of how sophisticated these people were," lead author Dr Gino Caspari from the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology and the University of Bern, told BBC News. Archaeologists worked with researcher Daniel Riday, a tattooist who reproduces ancient ink on his own body to understand how they were made. Tattooing was likely widespread during prehistory, but few remains from that era are preserved well enough to investigate. 7 Tattooing was likely widespread during prehistory, but few remains from that era are preserved well enough to investigate Credit: Daniel Riday But the so-called "ice mummies" of the Altai mountains in Siberia were often encased in ice tombs which preserved the skin. While the tattoos were not visibly on the skin, they were brought back to life using near-infrared digital photography in the Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg, Russia. Mystery Solved: The Story of 'The Screaming Woman' Mummy (1) The high-resolution scans were able to reveal the decorations for the first time in 2,500 years. "This made me feel like we were much closer to seeing the people behind the art, how they worked and learned. The images came alive," said Dr Caspari. On her right forearm, the woman had an image of leopards and tigers around the head of two deer. On the left arm, a mythical griffin-like creature with the body of a lion and the head and wings of an eagle appears to be fighting with a stag. "Twisted hind bodies and really intense battle scenes of wild animals are typical of the culture," explained Dr Caspari. 7 The high-resolution scans were able to reveal the decorations for the first time in 2,500 years Credit: Daniel Riday The "ice mummy" also had a rooster on her thumb, showing "an intriguing style with a certain uniqueness," says Dr Caspari. The design was made with uniform thickness, suggesting sophisticated methods and tools for tattooing. Some lines were created using a multipoint tool, while others were made with a finer, single-point tool, according to the study. The researchers could even see where the ancient tattooist stopped working and picked up again in the overlapping of some lines. "Many cultures around the world traditionally used bundles of plant thorns and spines to tattoo," study co-author Aaron Deter-Wolf, an archaeologist at the Tennessee Division of Archaeology and ancient-tattooing expert, told Live Science in an email. "We envision the multi-point tool as being a tightly clustered bundle of tines, probably bound together with thread or sinew." The tools were made of natural, biodegradable materials, meaning the researchers aren't able to examine the implements themselves. 7 The so-called "ice mummies" of the Altai mountains in Siberia were often encased in ice tombs which preserved the skin Credit: M Vavulin


Scottish Sun
6 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Hive of radioactive WASPS found at nuclear site by officials
The site was constructed in the 1950s to produce the materials needed to build nuclear weapons during the Cold War BUZZKILL Hive of radioactive WASPS found at nuclear site by officials Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A HIVE of radioactive wasps has been discovered at a nuclear facility in the US, according to a public government report. Startled officials found that the nest clocked in at 100,000dpm, a moderately high radiation level, US outlet WYFF noted. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 After being discovered on 3 July, the nest has since been sprayed and bagged as radiological waste to be destroyed Credit: WYFF Disintegrations per minute (dpm) is the unit used to measure the rate at which a radioactive substance emits radiation. The report from the US Department of Energy revealed that Radiological Control Operations uncovered a wasp nest attached to a post near a tank at the Savannah River Site in Aiken, South Carolina. The nest has been described as "onsite legacy radioactive contamination", instead of being a loss of radioactive control. This means the nest is radioactive as a result of past activities, and not a result of a leak. While the Department has not detailed how the nest became contaminated, it has assured that the ground and surrounding area have not been contaminated. After being discovered on 3 July, the nest has since been sprayed and bagged as radiological waste to be destroyed. 'The delay in reporting was to allow time for reviewing previous wildlife contamination for consistency in reporting criteria,' the report stated. No other operations were affected by the discovery, The Independent reported. The site was constructed in the 1950s to produce the materials needed to build nuclear weapons during the Cold War. But cleanup and environmental efforts began in the 1980s after it was declared a Superfund site - a contaminated location that poses potential threats to public health and the environment. Mutant wolves roaming nuclear wasteland near Chernobyl develop shock 'invincibility' superpower - that could help humans It is not the only case of radioactive wildlife inhabiting contaminated zones, with Norwegian reindeer becoming contaminated following the fallout of Chernobyl. Elsewhere in South Carolina, researchers have been monitoring radiation in turtles in the Mohave Desert and the Savannah River. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory researcher Cyler Conrad, who has been monitoring the turtles, told National Geographic: 'So many different turtles at so many different sites were shaped by nuclear activity that occurred at those locations." He added: 'I did not have a full appreciation for how widespread those nuclear signals are in the environment.' 3 radioactive-warning-sign-1013477685 Credit: Getty


Scottish Sun
17 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Inside ‘lost' 6,000-year-old underwater city on coast of Cuba with stone structures 2,000ft below sea's surface
Dating back to more than six millennia, these ruins could be older than the Egyptian pyramids SEA FOR YOURSELF Inside 'lost' 6,000-year-old underwater city on coast of Cuba with stone structures 2,000ft below sea's surface Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A MYSTERIOUS 'lost city' lying 2,000 feet beneath the waves off Cuba has baffled scientists for more than two decades — with claims it could rewrite the history of human civilisation. Marine engineer Paulina Zelitsky and her husband, Paul Weinzweig, stunned the world in 2001 when sonar scans revealed huge stone formations on the seabed near the Guanahacabibes Peninsula. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 5 Mysterious stone structures 2,000ft down off Cuba have baffled scientists for two decades Credit: YouTube/Ancient Architects 5 Sonar scans revealed huge stone formations on seabed near Guanahacabibes Peninsula, which appeared to have pyramids, circular structures, and massive blocks Credit: ADC via Morien Institute 5 Aerial view of the Guanahacabibes peninsula, in Cuba Credit: Getty The images showed what looked like pyramids, circular structures, and massive blocks 'reminiscent of an urban development,' according to BBC News. Some of the stones measured up to 10 feet and appeared deliberately stacked. 'It's a really wonderful structure which really looks like it could have been a large urban center,' Zelitsky said at the time. The Canadian team, from Advanced Digital Communications (ADC), estimated the ruins could be more than 6,000 years old — making them older than the Egyptian pyramids. Read more Science stories MAGIC MONSTER Extinct creature found INSIDE 'magical' Ancient Roman amulet in 'world first' But despite the jaw-dropping find, no follow-up expedition has ever been carried out. While social media users today speculate the ruins are proof of Atlantis, experts remain cautious. 'It would be totally irresponsible to say what it was before we have evidence,' Zelitsky warned back in 2001. Cuban geologist Manuel Iturralde-Vinent, from the Natural History Museum, admitted the structures were 'extremely peculiar' but stressed the depth posed a major problem. 'It's strange, it's weird; we've never seen something like this before, and we don't have an explanation for it,' he told The Washington Post. Iturralde estimated it would take up to 50,000 years for the seabed to sink that far, far earlier than any known advanced civilization. Mystery new 'city' found underneath Egypt's Pyramids stretching 6,500ft BELOW surface in shock discovery, scientists say Michael Faught, an underwater archaeology expert at Florida State University, agreed. He said: 'It would be cool if Zelitsky and Weinzweig were right, but it would be really advanced for anything we would see in the New World for that time frame. 'The structures are out of time and out of place.' Other scientists have argued the formations are likely natural rock structures. Despite skepticism, the discovery continues to fuel conspiracy theories online. 'Civilizations that existed before the ice age, perhaps multiple civilizations that rose and fell... The historical knowledge that has been lost (or hidden),' one person posted on X. Another claimed: 'There is so much hidden history. Finding it so fascinating. Everything we been taught is a lie.' Funding problems and Cuba's strict control over foreign expeditions have also been blamed for the lack of further investigation. A planned dive in 2002 was scrapped, according to US oceanographer Sylvia Earle. Weinzweig himself once insisted: 'The structures we found on the side scan sonar simply are not explicable from a geological point of view. 'There is too much organisation, too much symmetry, too much repetition of form.' Another underwater enigma often compared to Cuba's 'lost city' is the Yonaguni monument off Japan's coast. Discovered in the 1980s, the massive stone formation sits around 90 feet underwater and features sharp-angled steps and terraces that appear man-made. Tests of the rock show it could be more than 10,000 years old. If carved by humans, it would date back to a time before the last ice age — a theory that, like the Cuban ruins, continues to divide experts over whether it's a natural formation or evidence of a vanished civilisation. 5 Scuba diver exploring the Yonaguni Monument, a submerged rock formation off the coast of Japan Credit: Alamy