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That ring on your finger
made of platinum or gold,
contains a secret
that has been at the center
of a cosmic mystery.
Scientists have been combing the galaxy
to figure out
where these so-called
heavy elements come from.
Lighter elements, everything from helium
with its two protons
per atom on up to iron,
which has 26 protons in each nucleus,
are better understood.
Most of these form inside stars,
but our knowledge gets fuzzy after iron.
Gold, which has 79 protons
in each atom, can't be made that way.
The same goes for platinum, xenon,
radon and many rare earth elements.
For decades, scientists theorized
where these heavy metals come from
and how they arrived on Earth.
The leading idea
was an extremely violent, cosmic event,
a collision between two neutron stars.
Until recently, this was just a theory.
But that changed a few years ago,
when scientists detected
gravitational waves from such a crash
and saw light at the same time.
This light held the
chemical signatures
of these heavy elements,
offering the first evidence,
supporting the theory
of where they come from.
It also helped scientists
fill in some of the details
of how this process might work.
Neutron
stars are the densest things
in the universe except for black holes.
They are born
when heavy stars die
in their cores collapse.
The incredible gravitational pressures
pushes the atoms together.
Protons and electrons push
all, leaving a star
almost entirely made of neutrons.
In the rare case,
when two neutron stars slam together,
the explosion creates
mind blowing temperatures and pressures.
It also pumps out a lot of free neutrons.
Up to a gram of neutrons
spills into every cubic centimeter
of space.
These rare conditions
ignite what's called the rapid
neutron capture process,
otherwise known as r-process for short.
It all
starts with a seed nucleus such as iron.
The iron nucleus starts out
with 26 protons and around 30 neutrons.
But during the r-process,
it will quickly capture
many more neutrons
in a matter of milliseconds.
The new nucleus is highly unstable
because of its lopsided
quantity of neutrons,
so some of those neutrons
will decay into protons.
The result of this extremely fast,
complex process is a new form of matter.
Just think that piece of gold
on your finger.
Every bit of it
started off in a cosmic cataclysm
that is among the most violent
and powerful forces in the universe.
A cosmic mystery
on the way to being solved
and a piece of the universe all in
the palm of your hand.