Earth’s Water From Comets …
From infinity and beyond …
“Most hydrogen comes in a form in which its nucelus consists of a single proton, but there’s also an istope called deuterium that contains both a proton and a neutron. In the Earth’s oceans, only about 1.6 in every 5,000 water molecules contain deuterium, so if we’re looking for sources for our planet’s water, we need to find bodies that have a similar ratio. We’ve looked at six comets that originate in the Oort cloud (the distant-most bodies associated with the Sun), and they have ratios about double that found on Earth. That left enstatite chondrites, a type of meteorite, as the best match for Earth’s water.
Now, using the ESA’s Herschel observatory, researchers have gotten a good reading on the comet 103P/Hartley 2, which orbits near Jupiter but probably got its start in the Kuiper belt, just outside the orbit of Neptune. And it turns out that the deuterium/hydrogen ratio is nearly an exact match for that in Earth’s oceans. That means a large population of comets have just become candidates for seeding our planet with water.”
Thanks Met great post!
Jan Oort hypothesized the cloud of comets now named for him in the 1930’s.
No one has imaged the Oort cloud directly, but it is there.
Sounds like a great plot for Transformers 4. Optimus Prime seeds the earth with water with help from Buzz Lightyear. And counsel from Fillmore “Heavy, man!”