Capiert Posted July 15, 2018 Posted July 15, 2018 (edited) is extraterrestrial, it(s origin) does NOT come from this world (earth). Or does it? I suspect nickel is a fusion product from the intense heat of (some) material entering the earth's atmosphere. Keyword: atmosphere. Asteroids are smaller objects without a significant atmosphere. The moon's atmosphere is also (probably) insignificant, as seen from fotos (dark background, no blue sky, nor clouds). But dust (from impacts), & impacts into sand can also get hot, as something (=material, other than air) to rub against (for the friction(al heat production))). Cosmic rays have been reported in the upper earth's atmosphere, (presumably) high speed particles, striking=hitting into the atmosphere, with AtNo element ions high as nickel. I've often wondered why meteorites had so much nickel; & the earth (had (next to)) none in its rock(s) (bedstone, e.g. granite) mother earth. Why was nickel an extraterrestrial material? Did those meteorites travel near a nuclear (fusion) reactor, the sun? Most of outer space was dark, empty & cold. Most asteroids did NOT seem to have enough nickel, if any at all. (Space exploration for precious metals seemed like a ridiculous pipe_dream fantasy: like looking for gold in the sahara desert, or at your local beach, or a volcano (would be more profitable, because), it's just NOT there, in plenty.*) Where then did the meteorites get their nickel & iron(!) from? Observing the mass_defect peaks at iron (AtNo 26), I (now) suspect fusion (temperatures) are the (major) cause for why (almost) any junk (=material) entering earth('s atmosphere), if not getting vaporized in the process (hint: =cosmic_ray ions), can have nickel & iron (in it). (*So (now) all nasa(like industrial companies, have=)has to do is shoot up boulders (into the sky) (beyond the upper atmosphere), & (then) let them fall, (transforming in)to iron_nickel meteorites. & dig out the crater (later). That's mighty expensive for a few grams of (man_made) nickel. Isn't it easier just to dig out the rubble that has naturally landed, instead; which we do?) Edited July 15, 2018 by Capiert
swansont Posted July 15, 2018 Posted July 15, 2018 Nickel is found in meteorites. That is extraterrestrial. It's also found here on earth. It's all a product of fusion — in stars (atmospheric temperatures are way too low for this to be a mechanism). It's just that some of the nickel did not conglomerate on earth while it formed — it did so elsewhere. 1
studiot Posted July 15, 2018 Posted July 15, 2018 (edited) Isn't this the (recent) second thread on this subject? Edit Yes I thought so Edited July 15, 2018 by studiot 1
John Cuthber Posted July 15, 2018 Posted July 15, 2018 (edited) W(hy all) the b(rack)ets? At the temperatures where nuclear fusion takes place, everything vapourises. The only way you can get solid nickel is to make it in a star - where gravity will keep it together in spite of being vapour- and then release it into the cosmos when the star explodes. Then wait for gravity to bring the "ashes" together. Edited July 15, 2018 by John Cuthber 1
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