Biggest Known Diamond In The Entire Universe (Real)

Confirming what the Beatles always knew, astronomers have actually
found a diamond in the sky - directly above Australia. It is the
biggest known diamond in the universe, in fact. According to
American astronomers at the Harvard-Smithsonian Centre for
Astrophysics, a white dwarf star in the constellation of Centaurus,
next to the Southern Cross, has been found to have a
3000-kilometre-wide core of crystallised carbon, or diamond. It
weighs 2.27 thousand trillion trillion tonnes - that's 10 billion
trillion trillion carats, or a 1 followed by 34 zeroes. The biggest
earthly jewel is one of the British crown jewels, the 530-carat Star of
Africa. However, this cosmic jewel is hidden beneath a layer of
hydrogen and helium gases, with the diamond core making up between 50
and 90 per cent of its mass. "It's the mother of all diamonds," said
astronomer Travis Metcalfe, who led the team of researchers that
studied the star. "Some people refer to it as Lucy, in a tribute to the Beatles song Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds." Known
officially as BPM 37093, the star confirms a theory, first raised in
the early 1960s, that cool white dwarfs should have a diamond core. A white dwarf is what small stars, those up to about the size of the sun, turn into when they run out of nuclear fuel and die. The intense pressures at the heart of such dead stars compress the carbon into diamond. But confirming this theory has only been possible recently.
Lucy "pulsates", which means its light fluctuates at regular intervals.
"By measuring these pulsations, we were able to study the hidden
interior of the white dwarf, just like seismograph measurements of
earthquakes allow geologists to study the interior of the Earth," Dr
Metcalfe said. "We figured that the carbon interior of this white dwarf has solidified to form the galaxy's largest diamond." This
means that other white dwarfs must also have diamond cores. Our own sun
will become a white dwarf when it dies in 5 billion years. Two billion
years after that, its ember core will crystallise as well, leaving a
giant diamond in the centre of our solar system. Vince Ford, a
research officer at Mount Stromlo Observatory near Canberra, said
astronomers, including Australians, had observed the star for more than
eight years. The star is about 50 light years away (500 trillion
kilometres) - a fair distance as far as stars go. This means it is
about 400 times too faint to see with the naked eye. via Ferrari Murakami |


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