Earth collided with Mercury-like planet to give birth to carbon: Scientists
New York, Sep 6 Nearly all of the Earth's life-giving carbon could have come from a collision about 4.4 billion years ago between the Earth and an embryonic planet similar to Mercury, say scientists including an Indian-origin researcher.

"The challenge is to explain the origin of the volatile elements like carbon that remain outside the core in the mantle portion of our planet," petrologist Rajdeep Dasgupta from Rice University said.
Dasgupta's lab specialises in recreating the high-pressure and high-temperature conditions that exist deep inside the Earth and other rocky planets.
His team squeezes rocks in hydraulic presses that can simulate conditions about 250 miles below the Earth's surface or at the core-mantle boundary of smaller planets like Mercury.
"Even before this paper, we had published several studies that showed that even if carbon did not vaporize into space when the planet was largely molten, it would end up in the metallic core of our planet, because the iron-rich alloys there have a strong affinity for carbon," Dasgupta explained.
Dasgupta co-authored the study with Rice post-doctoral researcher Yuan Li and other colleagues.
"One popular idea has been that volatile elements like carbon, sulfur, nitrogen and hydrogen were added after Earth's core finished forming," said Li, who is now staff scientist at Guangzhou Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
"Any of those elements that fell to Earth in meteorites and comets more than about 100 million years after the solar system formed could have avoided the intense heat of the magma ocean that covered Earth up to that point," Li pointed out.
The Earth's core, which is mostly iron, makes up about one-third of the planet's mass.
The mantle, atmosphere and crust constantly exchange elements, including the volatile elements needed for life.
The experiments revealed that carbon could be excluded from the core -- and relegated to the silicate mantle -- if the iron alloys in the core were rich in either silicon or sulfur.
"The key data revealed how the partitioning of carbon between the metallic and silicate portions of terrestrial planets varies as a function of the variables like temperature, pressure and sulfur or silicon content," Li said.
"One scenario that explains the carbon-to-sulfur ratio and carbon abundance is that an embryonic planet like Mercury, which had already formed a silicon-rich core, collided with and was absorbed by Earth," Dasgupta added.
Because it's a massive body, the dynamics could work in a way that the core of that planet would go directly to the core of our planet, and the carbon-rich mantle would mix with Earth's mantle, the authors noted in the paper published in the journal Nature Geoscience.
IANS
-
Gold Silver Rate Today, 30 March 2026: City-Wise Prices, MCX Update On 24K Gold, 22K Gold And Silver -
LPG Crunch: Karnataka Brings New SOPs, Makes PNG Registration Mandatory for Businesses -
Hyderabad Gold Silver Rate Today, 30 March 2026: Check Fresh 24K, 22K, 18K Gold And Silver Prices In City -
Opinion Poll For Kerala Assembly Election 2026: Ldf Strength In Kannur And Kasaragod -
Tamil Nadu Polls 2026: Vijay Reveals Rs 645 Crore Assets, Rs 266 Crore in Banks; Know All His Declaration -
Mumbai Metro Line 9 Set for April 3 Launch, Dahisar-Mira Bhayandar to Get Direct Boost -
Hyderabad Gold Silver Rate Today, 31 March 2026: Gold And Silver See Fresh Movement, Check Latest City Rates -
Gold Silver Rate Today, 31 March 2026: City-Wise Prices, MCX Trend As Gold Rises And Silver Slips -
Rahul Arunoday Banerjee Autopsy Report: Actor Was Underwater For Over An Hour, Sand Found In Lungs -
Thunderstorm Warning In Delhi NCR: IMD Issues Orange Alert Amid Sudden Weather Shift -
Trump Hints At Breakthrough With Iran Amid War Escalation, Calls Recent Move A ‘Sign Of Respect’ -
UP STF Nabs Maulana Abdullah Salim Over Controversial Comment On CM Yogi's Mother












Click it and Unblock the Notifications