Astrophysics


Astrophysics Research Areas

Interstellar Chemistry - Douglas C. B. Whittet

Our research seeks to test the hypothesis that organic molecules relevant to the origin of life are ubiquitous to interstellar condensations from which planetary systems are born. The principal carriers of the biogenic elements in interstellar clouds are submicron sized dust grains. The physical and chemical properties of these particles, and their evolution with respect to time in regions of active star formation, are important and topical issues in modern astrophysics which have potentially far-reaching implications for studies of the origin of life.

Research on star formation has been greatly stimulated in recent years by advances in infrared astronomy, providing a means of studying stellar populations deep within molecular clouds in regions hidden from view at visible wavelengths. Infrared observations also provide an extremely powerful technique for investigating the nature of interstellar dust: solid state spectral features contain a wealth of information on the composition, internal structure and thermal history of the grains. The spectral resolving power required to extract all information inherent in the profiles is now routinely available on both ground-based telescopes and the Infrared Space Observatory.

We are carrying out a systematic study of infrared dust features in a carefully selected sample of embedded young stellar objects and distant field stars viewed through molecular clouds. The primary aim is to explore the evolution of icy grain mantles in the cocoons of low-mass protostars, using the field stars as the 'control experiment' delineating dust properties in undisturbed molecular-cloud material.

Results are interpreted with reference to the optical properties of compounds synthesised in the laboratory under simulated interstellar conditions. Our observations provide detections of not only simple ices such as H2O, CO and CO2, but also organic molecules of various degrees of complexity and oxidation state, including CH4, CH3OH, H2CO, HCOOH and HCN. This program of research will lead to a clear understanding of the evolution of organic matter in dust in the environments of objects which are realistic analogs of the early Solar System.

This research is being carried out in collaboration with groups at NASA Ames Laboratory, the Laboratory for Space Research, Groningen, and Leiden University.

Chemistry and Physics of the Solar Nebula - Wayne G. Roberge

Synthesis of Biogenic Compounds by Shocks in the Solar Nebula

Virtually all of the material which eventually formed the protoplanetary disk was processed by strong shock waves: matter accreted from the parent molecular cloud was accelerated by gravity to highly supersonic infall velocities before striking the disk surface, where it passed through an accretion shock. This shock heated the accreting material to temperatures which ranged from about 5000K in the outer solar system to above 10,000K in the inner solar system. Although the chemistry of these shocks is largely unexplored, studies of the relevant physics show that the chemical effects must have been profound for the biogenic materials:

The goal of our research is to model the gas and grain surface chemistry of shock-heated material in the primitive solar nebula. Principal questions to be addressed include the following:

Other Research Areas:
Biology
Chemistry
Earth Sciences


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Center for Studies of Origins of Life, Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst., Troy, NY 12180
http://www.origins.rpi.edu