• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Ice Worlds Throughout The Galaxy May Be Raining Diamonds

September 6, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

Diamonds gain their value from how rare they are on the surface of Earth. Just last week we learned there may be a “diamond factory” beneath our feet produced where Earth’s core meets the mantle, while diamonds in the sky turn out to be very real. From a more universal perspective, however, it looks increasingly like they are as common as muck.

Years ago planetary scientists proposed the extreme pressures inside the so-called “ice giants” Uranus and Neptune produce diamond rain, and even managed to make nanodiamonds by replicating these conditions in the lab. There’s evidence the way the diamonds sink through the gaseous material, generating heat from friction as they fall, is a common enough phenomenon to influence the planets’ heat balance.

Advertisement

Our Solar System has two ice giants to four rocky planets, but on a galactic scale, these may actually be the most common type of planet. Modeling of ice giants with somewhat more complex atmospheric compositions in Science Advances suggests diamond formation may be at least as common elsewhere.

Uranus and Neptune are both very low in oxygen in their gaseous outer layers, but their ammonia-water oceans require oxygen for the H2O. Their counterparts elsewhere may be richer in oxygen. The team that produced nano-diamonds under Neptune-like temperatures and pressures in a pure methane atmosphere sought to investigate whether the same thing would occur in an otherwise-similar oxygen-rich planet.

They turned to an unexpected material – PET, a clear, strong plastic often used in typical soft drink bottles. “PET has a good balance between carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen to simulate the activity in ice planets,” said Professor Dominik Kraus of the University of Rostock in a statement. The authors bombarded PET samples with X-ray lasers.

Advertisement

Rather than preventing diamond formation, Kraus and co-authors found oxygen actually makes it more likely. With oxygen present, diamonds form at lower temperatures and pressures than without.

“The effect of the oxygen was to accelerate the splitting of the carbon and hydrogen and thus encourage the formation of nanodiamonds,” Kraus said. “It meant the carbon atoms could combine more easily and form diamonds.”

The diamonds formed in this study are just a few nanometers wide, but the authors think they would grow under ice giant conditions to weigh millions of carats (at least 200 kilograms). Although the dense gases on worlds such as this would slow their fall, eventually the diamonds would sink to form a layer around the solid core.

Advertisement

Even the most imaginative schemes for planetary mining are unlikely to find a path to retrieving precious stones from beneath tens of thousands of kilometers of gas dense enough to produce pressures that form them. However, the discovery could prove practical in another way, with the researchers believing their technique for making nano-diamonds by shining lasers on PET could be commercially viable. 

These diamonds would be unlikely to be large enough to threaten the gemstone industry, but could be used for abrasives, quantum sensors, and medical contrast agents.

“The way nanodiamonds are currently made is by taking a bunch of carbon or diamond and blowing it up with explosives,” said Stanford University’s Dr Benjamin Ofori-Okai. “This creates nanodiamonds of various sizes and shapes and is hard to control. What we’re seeing in this experiment is a different reactivity of the same species under high temperature and pressure.” This might produce more consistent outcomes.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Athletics – Thompson-Herah ends stellar season on a high
  2. India merger of Sony, Zee to create TV powerhouse challenging Disney
  3. EU court adviser finds car defeat devices broadly illegal
  4. Compromise needed to clinch global tax deal – France

Source Link: Ice Worlds Throughout The Galaxy May Be Raining Diamonds

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Plastic Chemicals May Delay The Internal Body Clock By 17 Minutes, According To Study
  • Widespread Availability Of RSV Vaccine Linked To Fall In Baby Hospitalizations
  • How Often Should You Wash Your Bedding?
  • What’s The Youngest Language In The World?
  • Look Alert: The Most Active Volcano In the Pacific Northwest Is Probably About To Blow, Maybe
  • Should We Be Using Microwaves?
  • What Is The Largest Deer On Earth?
  • World’s First CRISPR-Edited Spider Produces Glowing Red Silk From Its Spinneret
  • First Ever Image Of “Free Floating” Atoms, The Nocebo Effect Beats The Placebo Effect When It Comes To Pain, And Much More This Week
  • 165-Million-Year-Old Fossil Is New Species Of Ancient Parasite. Did It Come From A Dinosaur’s Butt?
  • It’s True: Time Really Does Move Slower When You’re Exercising
  • Salmon Make Some Of The Most Epic Migrations In Nature. Why Do They Bother?
  • The Catholic Apostolic Church In Albury Has Been Sealed “Until The Second Coming”
  • The Voynich Manuscript Appears To Follow Zipf’s Law. Could It Be A Real Language?
  • When Will All Life On Earth Die Out? Here’s What The Data Says
  • One Of The World’s Rarest And Most Endangered Mammals Is *Checks Notes* A Unicorn
  • Neanderthals Used World’s Oldest Wooden Spears To Hunt Horses 200,000 Years Ago
  • Striking Results Show Neanderthal Crafters Were Sharper Than We Thought
  • Pioneering Research Reveals How Darkness And Light Made The Parthenon Appear Divine
  • Peculiar Material Revealed To Have Hidden Quantum State That Can’t Be Flipped In A Mirror
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version