Posts tagged "geology"

Scientists have determined the temperature near the Earth’s centre to be 6000 degrees Celsius, 1000 degrees hotter than in a previous experiment run 20 years ago. These measurements confirm geophysical models that the temperature difference between the solid core and the mantle above, must be at least 1500 degrees to explain why the Earth has a magnetic field. The scientists were even able to establish why the earlier experiment had produced a lower temperature figure. The results are published on 26 April 2013 in Science.

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mineralia:

Opal from Australia
by Exceptional Minerals

mineralia:

Opal from Australia

by Exceptional Minerals

spaceplasma:

A Remarkable Outburst from an Old Black Hole
NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory has discovered an extraordinary outburst by a black hole in the spiral galaxy M83, located about 15 million light years from Earth. Using Chandra, astronomers found a new ultraluminous X-ray source (ULX), objects that give off more X-rays than most “normal” binary systems in which a companion star is in orbit around a neutron star or black hole.
On the left is an optical image of M83 from the Very Large Telescope in Chile, operated by the European Southern Observatory. On the right is a composite image showing X-ray data from Chandra in pink and optical data from the Hubble Space Telescope in blue and yellow. The ULX is located near the bottom of the composite image (mouseover for the exact position).
In Chandra observations that spanned several years, the ULX in M83 increased in X-ray brightness by at least 3,000 times. This sudden brightening is one of the largest changes in X-rays ever seen for this type of object, which do not usually show dormant periods.
Optical images reveal a bright blue source at the position of the ULX during the X-ray outburst. Before the outburst the blue source is not seen. These results imply that the companion to the black hole in M83 is a red giant star, more than about 500 million years old, with a mass less than about four times the Sun’s. According to theoretical models for the evolution of stars, the black hole should be almost as old as its companion.
Full Article
Credit:  Left image - Optical: ESO/VLT; Close-up - X-ray: NASA/CXC/Curtin University/R.Soria et al.,

spaceplasma:

A Remarkable Outburst from an Old Black Hole

NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory has discovered an extraordinary outburst by a black hole in the spiral galaxy M83, located about 15 million light years from Earth. Using Chandra, astronomers found a new ultraluminous X-ray source (ULX), objects that give off more X-rays than most “normal” binary systems in which a companion star is in orbit around a neutron star or black hole.

On the left is an optical image of M83 from the Very Large Telescope in Chile, operated by the European Southern Observatory. On the right is a composite image showing X-ray data from Chandra in pink and optical data from the Hubble Space Telescope in blue and yellow. The ULX is located near the bottom of the composite image (mouseover for the exact position).

In Chandra observations that spanned several years, the ULX in M83 increased in X-ray brightness by at least 3,000 times. This sudden brightening is one of the largest changes in X-rays ever seen for this type of object, which do not usually show dormant periods.

Optical images reveal a bright blue source at the position of the ULX during the X-ray outburst. Before the outburst the blue source is not seen. These results imply that the companion to the black hole in M83 is a red giant star, more than about 500 million years old, with a mass less than about four times the Sun’s. According to theoretical models for the evolution of stars, the black hole should be almost as old as its companion.


Full Article

Credit:  Left image - Optical: ESO/VLT; Close-up - X-ray: NASA/CXC/Curtin University/R.Soria et al.,

mineralia:

Arsenopyrite with Quartz and Fluorite from China
by Dan Weinrich

mineralia:

Arsenopyrite with Quartz and Fluorite from China

by Dan Weinrich

mineralia:

Hessonite Garnet from Canada
by Exceptional Minerals

mineralia:

Hessonite Garnet from Canada

by Exceptional Minerals

mineralia:

Smithsonite from Mexico
by Exceptional Minerals

mineralia:

Smithsonite from Mexico

by Exceptional Minerals

spaceplasma:

Meteorites on Mars

The sky falls on Mars, too, just as it does sometimes on Earth. In its long crosscountry drive over the pool table expanse of Meridiani Planum, Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity has encountered more than a dozen meteorites, all of them iron or stony-iron in composition.

Meteorites found on Mars are curiosities, but they can be something more than that, as a  paper in the Journal of Geophysical Research points out. A team of scientists led by James Ashley (Arizona State University) notes that because we have samples on Earth of the same kinds of meteorites found there, scientists can use the weathering seen on the Martian examples to probe bygone Martian climates.

The paper details three of Opportunity’s Mars meteorites, dubbed Block Island, Shelter Island, and Mackinac Island. Block Island was found by Opportunity on sol (Mars day) 1961 (July 31, 2009), Shelter Island on sol 2022 (October 1, 2009), and Mackinac Island on sol 2034 (October 14, 2009).Scientists are naming rocks of scientific interest after islands on earth.

 What’s most distinctive about these meteorites is that they show evidence for repeated episodes of weathering. For example, Block Island (an iron meteorite) shows two dramatically different faces: one smoothed, probably by sandblasting, and the other deeply pitted, probably by acidic corrosion. The corrosion likely occurred as thin films of water encountered iron sulfide minerals commonly found in iron meteorites.

Both Block Island and Shelter Island show evidence for multi-stage weathering. Close examination of their surfaces show that both have lost through weathering the fusion crusts that meteorites commonly develop as they speed through the atmosphere. Then exposure to water (or probably ice) created an oxydized (rusted) outer layer. This in turn has been largely scoured away by wind erosion.

There’s no way at present to determine how long those meteorites rested on the surface before Opportunity rolled by. But the weathering is unlikely to have happened recently, given Mars’ current arid, cold climate. Yet scientists know that over the last half million years at least, the planet’s spin axis has changed its tilt with respect to the Martian orbit. This has produced periods when snow and ice have come down from the polar regions and accumulated near the equator, probably including Meridiani Planum.

Credit: NASA/JPL

(via sagansense)

atomstargazer:

A First Green Meteorite May Be from Mercury

Scientists may have discovered the first meteorite from Mercury. This green meteorite that landed in Morocco in 2012 could be from Mercury.CREDIT: Stefan Ralew/sr-meteorites.de 
The green rock found in Morocco last year may be the first known visitor from the solar system’s innermost planet, according to meteorite scientist Anthony Irving, who unveiled the new findings this month at the 44th annual Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in The Woodlands, Texas. The study suggests that a space rock called NWA 7325 came from Mercury, and not an asteroid or Mars. NWA 7325 is actually a group of 35 meteorite samples discovered in 2012 in Morocco. They are ancient, with Irving and his team dating the rocks to an age of about 4.56 billion years.

atomstargazer:

A First Green Meteorite May Be from Mercury

Scientists may have discovered the first meteorite from Mercury. This green meteorite that landed in Morocco in 2012 could be from Mercury.
CREDIT: Stefan Ralew/sr-meteorites.de

The green rock found in Morocco last year may be the first known visitor from the solar system’s innermost planet, according to meteorite scientist Anthony Irving, who unveiled the new findings this month at the 44th annual Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in The Woodlands, Texas. The study suggests that a space rock called NWA 7325 came from Mercury, and not an asteroid or Mars. NWA 7325 is actually a group of 35 meteorite samples discovered in 2012 in Morocco. They are ancient, with Irving and his team dating the rocks to an age of about 4.56 billion years.

The picture above is of our galactic center with a very weak aurora in the foreground. Scientists believe there is a supermassive black hole at our galactic center. Infra-red astronomy indicates an extremely massive 3-4 million solar mass object at the center with intense radio output. The intense radio output of this object is best modeled by matter being ground up as it spirals towards a supermassive object, creating two huge jets of extremely hot material.

The picture above is of our galactic center with a very weak aurora in the foreground. Scientists believe there is a supermassive black hole at our galactic center. Infra-red astronomy indicates an extremely massive 3-4 million solar mass object at the center with intense radio output. The intense radio output of this object is best modeled by matter being ground up as it spirals towards a supermassive object, creating two huge jets of extremely hot material.

scinerds:

Earthquakes Can Create Gold Deposits in the Blink of an Eye
A new study by Australian geologists has shown that over 80% the world’s commercial gold deposits were generated in a flash process, the result of depressurizing earthquakes that rapidly converted mineral-rich fluids into precious veins of gold.
The process is called flash vaporization. Deep below the Earth’s crust, at depths ranging from three to 18 miles (5-30 km), fluid-filled fault cavities are subject to extreme temperatures and pressure. These fluids are rich in dissolved substances like gold and silicate minerals. But for those deposits located near fault lines, an earthquake can create a dramatic drop in pressure which forces the fluid to expand to as much as 130,000 times its former size — and in the blink of an eye.
The researchers, a team consisting of Dion Weatherley and Richard Henley, found that this depressurization process causes trapped fluids to expand to a very low-density vapor. This ‘flash’ effect results in the rapid deposition of silica, along with gold-enriched quartz veins.
From New Scientist: 

The fluid cannot get from the surrounding rock into the hole fast enough to fill the void, Henley says, so pressure drops from 3000 times atmospheric pressure to pressures almost the same as those at Earth’s surface in an instant. The nearby fluid flash-vaporises as a result – and any minerals it contains are deposited as it does. Later, incoming fluid dissolves some of the minerals, but the less-soluble ones, including gold, accumulate as more episodes of quake-driven flash deposition occur. “Large quantities of gold may be deposited in only a few hundred thousand years,” says Weatherley – a brief interval by geological standards. “Each event drops a little more gold,” adds Henley. “You can see it microscopically, tiny layer after tiny layer. It just builds up.”

Read the entire study at Nature Geoscience. More at Nature News and New Scientist.
Original Article

scinerds:

Earthquakes Can Create Gold Deposits in the Blink of an Eye

A new study by Australian geologists has shown that over 80% the world’s commercial gold deposits were generated in a flash process, the result of depressurizing earthquakes that rapidly converted mineral-rich fluids into precious veins of gold.

The process is called flash vaporization. Deep below the Earth’s crust, at depths ranging from three to 18 miles (5-30 km), fluid-filled fault cavities are subject to extreme temperatures and pressure. These fluids are rich in dissolved substances like gold and silicate minerals. But for those deposits located near fault lines, an earthquake can create a dramatic drop in pressure which forces the fluid to expand to as much as 130,000 times its former size — and in the blink of an eye.

The researchers, a team consisting of Dion Weatherley and Richard Henley, found that this depressurization process causes trapped fluids to expand to a very low-density vapor. This ‘flash’ effect results in the rapid deposition of silica, along with gold-enriched quartz veins.

From New Scientist:

The fluid cannot get from the surrounding rock into the hole fast enough to fill the void, Henley says, so pressure drops from 3000 times atmospheric pressure to pressures almost the same as those at Earth’s surface in an instant. The nearby fluid flash-vaporises as a result – and any minerals it contains are deposited as it does.
Later, incoming fluid dissolves some of the minerals, but the less-soluble ones, including gold, accumulate as more episodes of quake-driven flash deposition occur.
“Large quantities of gold may be deposited in only a few hundred thousand years,” says Weatherley – a brief interval by geological standards. “Each event drops a little more gold,” adds Henley. “You can see it microscopically, tiny layer after tiny layer. It just builds up.”

Read the entire study at Nature Geoscience. More at Nature News and New Scientist.

Original Article

Bachelors in biology, minored in chemistry. Overall science enthusiast.

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