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Supernova Shrapnel Found In Meteorite

coondoggie writes "Talk about finding a needle in a cosmic haystack. Scientists this week said they found microscopic shrapnel in a meteorite of a star they say exploded around the birth of our solar system 4.5 billion years ago."

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  1. Re:Supernova Shrapnel??? by radtea · · Score: 5, Informative

    isn't any atom heavier than Fe technically supernova shrapnel?

    Not if you consider "shrapnel" to mean "fragments that are small but not gaseous". The point here is that a nanoscale grain of chromium54 has been found, which suggests it cooled out of the supernova gas cloud and was driven into the meteroite during a collision, so it is a more-or-less pristine piece of supernova condensate that has not been processed further, the way the iron on Earth has, for example.

    That's a fairly interesting find, I'd say.

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