Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Singapore and interstellar gas clouds

Sitting at a country pub on the banks of the canal, basking in the Sun beside a weeping willow, the barges chugging languorously past, Singapore seems more than a world away. Swatting away an over-ambitious wasp, the skyline of this extraterrestrial plutopolis rises in the imagination like numerous glass, steel and concrete stalagmites, slowly precipitating from the steady drip of money over economic aeons.

Four and a half billion years ago, a cloud of interstellar gas and 'dust' (tiny grains of solid matter) contracted under the force of its own gravity, started to spin, and formed a rotating disk. The ball of material at the centre of the disk reached ever higher temperatures and pressures, until nuclear fusion ignited inside, and a star, our Sun, was born. The residual material in the surrounding disk then coalesced into an array of planets, our solar system.

The most abundant elements in the contracting cloud were hydrogen H, helium He, oxygen O, carbon C, nitrogen N, neon Ne, magnesium Mg, silicon Si, iron F and sulphur S. The silicon combined with oxygen to make silicates, and further combined with iron and magnesium to make what is colloquially known as rock. The remaining oxygen combined with hydrogen to make water. Within the outer reaches of the protoplanetary disk, the water was frozen, and the accretion of such icy masses gave the more distant planetesimals a head-start over the rocky masses which formed closer to the Sun. The more distant objects acquired sufficient mass to attract hydrogen, helium, and compounds such as methane CH4 and ammonia NH3, thereby creating the gas giants: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.

On the surface of the third planet from the Sun, a rocky planet, oceans of liquid water formed. The oceans were populated by countless microscopic photosynthesizing organisms. Many had shells or skeletons made of calcium carbonate, and these shells and skeletons were continuously returned to the ocean floor, where they accumulated over the ages as layers of chalk or limestone. Over those same timespans, grains of silica SiO2, or sand, were created from the weathering of silicate rock on the surface of the planetary crust. Then, eventually, an intelligent species emerged from the biosphere of the planet, delved into the planetary crust, and devised construction materials such as glass (silicon oxide which has been cooled sufficiently rapidly that the molecules are unable to form a regular crystal lattice), steel (iron judiciously doped with carbon atoms), and concrete (a coarse aggregate of limestone or gravel, combined with cement, water and sand, the cement itself a product of the heating and grinding of limestone and clay).

Four and a half billion years after the contraction of that cloud of interstellar gas and dust, Singapore rose as a glass, steel and concrete monument to the growth of complexity.

4 comments:

  1. ..And why is it again that glass when hung for a few years, then cut in two, the bottom weighs more than the top? Bit like F1 really, it seems the same on the face of things, but strange things are going on underneath. that we cannot explain with with any degree of certainty.

    I was perplexed why Renny did not lose the 2008 Singapore GP, then I thought, what am I missing here, which leads me to a process of deduction, whats the script we cannot see? Is Alonso the chief prosecution witness, has he done a deal? On the face of it like the creation of the sun its all too good to be true or is it?

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  2. Cheers Doug!

    Bad news on the flowing glass issue, Sean.

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  3. as said too good to be true, maybe in the run off areas we should built pools of custard to see if they sink or keep going :0)

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