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rt their experimental findings in a paper in the Oct. 1 issue of Science. The demonstration that methane can convert to diamond as well as other plex hydrocarbons in the interiors of giant planets like Neptune hint at a plex chemistry inside gaseous planets and even brown dwarf stars. Brown dwarfs are small, dim stars barely larger than the largest gas giant planets. This is opening the door to study of the interesting types of chemical reactions taking place inside planets and brown dwarfs, Jeanloz said. Now that technology is able to reproduce the high pressures and temperatures found there, we are getting much better quality information on the chemical reactions taking place under these conditions. It is not amazing that chemistry like this happens inside planets, it39。s just that most people haven39。t dealt with the chemical reactions that can occur, Benedetti said. The interior of these planets may be much more plicated that our current picture. A simple calculation, for example, shows that the energy released by diamonds settling to the planet39。s core could account for the excess heat radiated by Neptune, that is, the heat given off by Neptune in excess of what it receives from the sun. What39。s exciting to us is the application of this highpressure chemistry to understanding the outer planets, Jeanloz said. As more planets are found in unexpected orbits around other stars, the effects of internal chemical processes will need to be further clarified in order to obtain a general understanding of planet formation and evolution, the authors concluded in the Science paper. Our solar system39。s other gas giant planets Jupiter and Saturn may also contain diamonds produced under such conditions, though they contain proportionately less methane than Neptune and Uranus. Based on theoretical calculations, Neptune and Uranus are estimated to contain about 10 to 15 percent methane under an outer atmosphere of hydrogen and helium. (See graphic for presumed internal structure of Neptune.Several groups of researchers have suggested that the methane in these planets could conceivably turn into diamond at fairly shallow depths, about one tenth of the way to the center. Nearly two decades ago, a group at Lawrence Livermore National laboratory shocked some methane and reported the formation of diamond before the stuff evaporated. That group was led by retired scientist Marvin Ross and researchers William Nellis and Francis Ree. Recently some theorists in Italy also concluded that diamonds were likely. Benedetti and Jeanloz decided to try the obvious experiment squeeze liquid methane and see if they could make diamond dust. The liquid methane, cooled with liquid nitrogen, was placed in a diamond anvil cell and squeezed to between 10 and 50 billion pascals (gigapascals), or about 100,000 500,000 times atmospheric pressure. The researchers then heated the pressed methane with an infrared laser to about 2,000 to 3,000 Kelvin (36005400 degrees Fahrenheit). It39。s really cool to watch, said Benedetti. When you turn on the laser the methane turns black because of all the diamonds created. The black diamond specks float in a clear hydrocarbon liquid melted by the laser. Raman spectroscopy confirmed the identity of the suspended specks, as did subsequent analysis with Xray crystallography. The flecks were diamonds interspersed with hydrocarbons. Jeanloz said that the high temperature breaks up methane (CH4) into carbon and hydrogen, while high pressure condenses the carbon to diamond. Other types of hydrocarbons doubly and triply bonded carbon also were produced, apparently in the cooler areas outside that illuminated by the laser. Jeanloz and his team plan next to see what happens to other constituents of these planets ammonia and water at high temperatures and pressures. Coauthors of the paper with Benedetti and Jeanloz are postdoctoral researcher Jeffrey H. Nguyen, now a scientist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory。 geology graduate student Wendell A. Caldwell, Chinese visiting scholar Hongjian Liu and Michael Kruger, a former graduate student now in the physics department at the University of Missouri, Kansas City.Diamonds From The SkyAmherst August 9, 1999 In the Aug. 6 issue of the journal Science, University of Massachusetts geoscientist Stephen Haggerty contends that some of the carbon in diamonds es from outer space. Haggerty argues against the longheld view that the carbon in diamond es from the remains of plants and marine organisms as they decayed under the high temperatures and pressures of the Earth39。s deep interior. The invited review is titled, A Diamond Trilogy: Superplumes, Supercontinents, and Supernovae. Many in the scientific munity have long theorized that diamonds are primarily the result of organic materials that were dragged into the Earth39。s interior as one continental plate was thrust beneath another in a process called subduction. This theory holds that the organic material, when exposed to the extreme heat and pressure within the Earth for millions of years, produced the carbon in diamonds. But the fossil record, and the dating of diamonds, indicate that this carbon is at least three billion years older than animal and plant life. Haggerty suspects that some of the carbon in these diamonds was in fact produced in supernovae: the explosions of dying stars. The carbon was incorporated into our solar system, where it is the fourth most abundant element. This carbon, plus some that was brought to Earth on meteorites, may well be the source of diamonds, Haggerty says. The study of diamond has seen a recent burst of activity as new research methods have bee available. The new theory is based on an evaluation of this scientific literature, he notes. Evidence lending weight to the stardust theory includes the antiquity of the diamonds, and the similarity of carbon isotopic ratios to those found in met