Tag

Crystalline Silicates

All articles tagged with #crystalline silicates

JWST traces crystal seeds from a newborn star to its outer disk
space1 month ago

JWST traces crystal seeds from a newborn star to its outer disk

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope mapped where crystalline silicates form around the young star EC 53 in the Serpens Nebula and showed these minerals being carried outward by winds into the outer, planet-forming disk. EC 53 undergos ~18-month bursts lasting about 100 days, forging silicates in hot regions and launching them into cooler outer regions, effectively seeding the outer disk with components that icy comets may carry—providing a direct link between crystal formation and distribution in early planetary systems. The findings, published in Nature, help explain how comets at the solar system’s edge could form.

Webb Discovers Crystalline Silicates Forged in Inner Disk of Young Star, Flung to Disk Edges
space1 month ago

Webb Discovers Crystalline Silicates Forged in Inner Disk of Young Star, Flung to Disk Edges

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope observed protostar EC 53 in the Serpens Nebula and confirmed that crystalline silicates form in the hot inner disk, with MIRI spectra identifying minerals like forsterite and enstatite. The star’s strong disk winds and periodic outbursts appear to launch these crystals outward toward the disk’s edges, offering a mechanism for crystalline silicates found in comets and potentially seeding planet formation during the system’s ongoing evolution.