In clouds like Sagittarius B2 — and also in the cloud that long ago birthed our solar system — icy coatings can condense
around tiny grains of dust.
Not exact matches
I set out to find some
grain - free cookies that fit the bill — cookies that were crisp
around the edges, but chewy and a
tiny bit underbaked in the center.
However, new observations exploiting the power of ALMA are now answering one of the biggest questions: how do
tiny grains of dust in the disc
around a young star grow bigger and bigger — to eventually become rubble, and even boulders well beyond a metre in size?
In a protoplanetary cloud
around a young star there would be
tiny grains of rocky material that would provide a surface on which chemicals could react.
The surrounding kingdom for instance, is teeming with details:
tiny wagons carrying
grain from the mill to town, carriages shuttling princesses from building to building, and stealthy thieves scrambling
around your treasure pile.