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just wondering this but where in the hell does iron from space come from??? i watched some show on the histroy channel about iron asteriods on how they could destroy earth but i did not hear on where the iron comes from. where in space?????

2007-07-16 20:47:29 · 6 answers · asked by DUSTAN V 3 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

6 answers

Heavy metals like iron are formed in a Supernova explosion. A supernova is a massive explosion of a star that occurs under two possible scenarios. The first is that a white dwarf star undergoes a nuclear based explosion after absorbing mass from a neighboring star (usually a red giant). The second, and more common, cause is when a massive star, usually a red giant, reaches iron in its nuclear fusion (or burning) processes. Iron has one of the highest binding energies of all of the elements and is the last element that can be produced by nuclear fusion, exothermically. All nuclear fusion reactions from here on are endothermic and so the star loses energy. The star's gravity then pulls its outer layers rapidly inward. The star collapses very quickly, and then explodes.

2007-07-16 21:30:49 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If the meteorite came from a large body, such as a shattered small planet, the body could have been large enough to have an iron-nickel core, like the earth (some of the very large meteors between Jupiter and Mars have iron cores).

The body could have been shattered by colliding with another large body, when the solar system was still in the process of forming.
If the meteorite came from the outer, rocky layer of the shattered body, it would be a stony meteorite.

There is another, rarer type of meteorite called a carbonaceous chondrite; and these are believed to have formed early in the history of the solar system, and not to have formed later on.

2007-07-17 04:05:27 · answer #2 · answered by AndrewG 7 · 0 0

Iron production is the last phase of most stars, trillions of stars have spewed untold tons of iron into space and a lot of it ends up as asteroids, once in a few million years one these asteroids hits our planet and can cause great destruction. Scientists are aware of this and there is a faint hope that we will be able to alter the path of any that are headed this way.

2007-07-20 17:52:20 · answer #3 · answered by johnandeileen2000 7 · 0 0

Asteroids could be remnants from other planets or moons that have been previously destroyed and now their fragments (including iron ore and other minerals) are now just drifting along endlessly in space. Iron of course comes from the arrangement of certain molecules over a long persiod of time.

2007-07-17 03:51:27 · answer #4 · answered by Medic 3 · 0 0

In the early days of the solar system (some 4.6 billion years ago) asteroids had metallic cores, middle regions of stone and iron, and surfaces of stone. Over time, many of them collided with others and broke apart. The fragments, which became many of today's asteroids, are therefore classified as irons, stony-irons or stony.
Iron 91%
Nickel 8.5%
Cobalt 0.6%

2007-07-17 04:00:30 · answer #5 · answered by sparks9653 6 · 0 0

Iron and all heavy elements come from dying stars. When stars die the helium and hydrogen in them fuse together to form heavier elements (everything from iron to gold to carbon ... you name it).

2007-07-17 03:51:44 · answer #6 · answered by Kleineganz 5 · 0 0

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