The scientists used deuterium as a diagnostic to whether the ices of the solar system were chemically modified inside the protoplanetary disk of the solar system or whether the deuterium of these ices stayed the same after they were born in interstellar space:https://carnegiescience.edu/news/earth% ... _older_sun wrote:
“Why this is important? If water in the early Solar System was primarily inherited as ice from interstellar space, then it is likely that similar ices, along with the prebiotic organic matter that they contain, are abundant in most or all protoplanetary disks around forming stars,” Alexander explained. “But if the early Solar System’s water was largely the result of local chemical processing during the Sun’s birth, then it is possible that the abundance of water varies considerably in forming planetary systems, which would obviously have implications for the potential for the emergence of life elsewhere.”
I'm interested in how much we know about the deuterium content of interstellar ices. But I would also like to know if there might be alternative explanations to the deuterium content of the Earth's water.https://carnegiescience.edu/news/earth% ... _older_sun wrote:
For example, interstellar water-ice has a high ratio of deuterium to hydrogen because of the very low temperatures at which it forms.
This summer I visited a science fair in London, where I had the opportunity to talk to scientists working on the Rosetta mission. I asked them what their mission at the comet actually was, and I was told that one of the most important tasks was to measure the deuterium content of the water ices or water vapor on or right next to the surface of 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko. The scientists wanted to know if the deuterium content of the water on or right next to the surface of the comet matched the deuterium content found on the Earth.
The scientist explained a hypothesis about the deuterium content of the Earth's water, namely, that the deuterium content has been rising over time. That is because water can escape from the Earth as chemical reactions separates the hydrogen from the oxygen, and then the lightweight hydrogen can disappear into space. But it is more likely that "heavy hydrogen", deuterium, will remain on the Earth while the more lightweight "normal hydrogen" escapes. The deuterium can then react with oxygen to form water again, but now it will be "heavy water". When these processes go on for billions of years, the deuterium content in the Earth's water will rise.
So it could be that the deuterium content of the Earth's water today doesn't match the deuterium content of the Earth's water three or four billion years ago.
I'm writing this because the scientists in the Carnegie Science article seemed to be comparing the Earth's water and its deuterium content with interstellar ices (and what exactly do we know about the deuterium content in them?) and possible processes going on four and a half to five billion years ago inside the original solar nebula. But isn't it possible that the deuterium content of the Earth's water is partly a result of processes that have been going on on the Earth for billions of years?
Ann