Scientists discover water cloud in deep space
With a little reminder, today heavy water (D2O) allows the use of natural uranium as fuel in reactors. This molecule, which is 10.6 percent denser than regular water and has a very similar chemical formula, contains two deuterium atoms and one oxygen, compared to water, which contains two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. It’s “heavy” because it contains deuterium, known as heavy hydrogen, instead of hydrogen.
The majority of scientists think that icy comets or asteroids slammed into the Earth’s surface and melted. So how did these bodies get water in the first place? The discovery of this water cloud in space may have given us this answer.
This is because comets are typically made up of debris that is involved in the formation of planets. Astronomers who observe the process between the formation of planets and comets explain that water is an essential molecule in the process of star and planet formation and acts as a catalyst within star/planet formation discs. Therefore, the concentration of water found in this particular disc may offer new insights into the origins of water in our solar system.