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Sugarcoated news arrives from space.


The stuff of the cosmos just got sweeten Researchers announced last week the first discovery of a sugar in space. They found it in a massive cloud of gas and dust 26,000 light-years from Earth.

Last month, the scientists searched for the simple sugar called glycolaldehyde with the 12 Meter Telescope on Kitt Peak near Tucson, Ariz. They detected the sugar's signature radio emissions in the star-forming region Sagittarius B2 (North), near the center of the Milky Way. The eight-atom molecule contains hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon. It can combine with other molecules to form more-complex sugars, such as ribose, that serve as biological building blocks.

Glycolaldehyde's discovery also gives space scientists their first set of three molecules that are made of the same atoms but arranged in different structures, report Philip R. Jewell of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), federal observatory for radio astronomy, founded in 1956 and operated under contract with the National Science Foundation by Associated Universities, Inc., a group of major universities.  in Green Bank, W. Va., Jan M. Hollis of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center The Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) is a major NASA space research laboratory established on May 1, 1959 as NASA's first space flight center. GSFC employs approximately 10,000 civil servants and contractors, and is located approximately 6.5 miles northeast of Washington, D.C.  in Greenbelt, Md., and Frank J. Lovas of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Early years: 1867-1880
The Morrill Act of 1862 granted each state in the United States a portion of land on which to establish a major public state university, one which could teach agriculture, mechanic arts, and military training, "without excluding other scientific
. Acetic acid and methyl formate, previously discovered in interstellar clouds, and the sugar make up the first isomeric i·so·mer  
n.
1. Chemistry Any of two or more substances that are composed of the same elements in the same proportions but differ in properties because of differences in the arrangement of atoms.

2.
 triplet triplet /trip·let/ (trip´let)
1. one of three offspring produced at one birth.

2. a combination of three objects or entities acting together, as three lenses or three nucleotides.

3.
 in space.

"We can look in interstellar space and use this as a laboratory to try to examine the chemistry that might have existed on the early Earth," says Jewell.

"Furthermore, people have postulated--and it's just a hypothesis--that materials like this would have seeded the Earth from cometary tails that passed by the Earth early on after its formation," says Jewell.

"That may be the reason why life arose quickly," adds Hollis. "Some of the processing had already gone on in the cloud Refers to the operation taking place within a network. See cloud.  before the Earth was formed."

Making more complicated biological building blocks like ribose may be almost impossible in space, comments James P. Ferris of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, at Troy, N.Y.; coeducational; founded and opened 1824 as Rensselaer School; chartered 1826. It was called Rensselaer Institute from 1837 to 1861.  in Troy, N.Y., who directs the New York Center for Studies on the Origins of Life. "The detection of glycolaldehyde helps the problem [of how life might arise] along a little bit.... Maybe if this can be forming in the interstellar medium, then maybe there are even more complex structures up there."

Concerned that the results might be misinterpreted, Hollis says that he "would caution against making too great a leap of faith between detection of a simple sugar and detecting life in the interstellar clouds."
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Article Details
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Author:Gorman, J.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 24, 2000
Words:384
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