PERSPECTA

News from every angle

Back to headlines

Astronomers Discover Sugar in Interstellar Space, Offering Clues to Cosmic Chemistry

Astronomers have detected a natural sugar, similar to one found in raspberries, in a cloud of dust and gas near the center of the Milky Way. This marks the first time a true sugar has been discovered in interstellar space, highlighting its potential significance for the origin of life and offering new clues to cosmic chemistry.

13 Jul, 13:54 — 14 Jul, 06:19
PostShare

Source Diversity

Source Diversity

Excellent (100/100)
11 sources33/33
Spectrum spread5/5 buckets covered33/33
Far L2
Far Left (2)
NYTThe Guardian
Left3
Left (3)
index-hrYahooder-standard
Center1
Center (1)
klix-ba
Right4
Right (4)
rzeczpospolitael-mundola-vanguardiaTimes of India
Far R1
Far Right (1)
Daily Sabah
Geographic diversity9 regions34/34
US2Spain2Turkey1Poland1Croatia1Bosnia1UK1Austria1India1

Sources

Showing 5 of 11 sources
NYTMostly Factual21h ago

A Sweet Surprise: Scientists Find Sugar Deep in Our Galaxy

It’s the first time a sugar molecule has been detected in interstellar space. The discovery provides tantalizing new clues into how life may have arisen on Earth.

By Rebecca Dzombak

Read full article →
The GuardianMostly Factual23h ago

Natural sugar discovered in cloud of dust and gas near centre of Milky Way

Detection of erythrulose, also found in raspberries, shows that compounds key to life can form in interstellar space A natural sugar found in raspberries and used in fake tan lotions has been detected in an enormous cloud of dust and gas that lurks near the heart of the Milky Way. The discovery does not suggest that the galaxy revolves around a distant civilisation of pale, safety-conscious frugivores, but shows that compounds important for life can form in the frigid expanse between the star...

By Ian Sample Science editor

Read full article →
YahooMostly Factual22h ago

Astronomers discover sugar in space that's also found in raspberries

Read full article →
Times of IndiaMostly Factual1d ago

A supernova lit up Earth’s sky in 1054 and was visible in daylight. Hubble now shows its glowing remains are still expanding nearly 1,000 years later

Astronomers used the Hubble Space Telescope to measure the expanding Crab Nebula. New images compared with older ones show gas filaments moving outwards. This ancient stellar explosion's remnant is still actively changing today. The Crab Pulsar at the center continues to power the nebula's glow. Scientists also identified previously unrecognised filament structures within the nebula.

By TOI Science Desk

Read full article →
Daily SabahMixed7h ago

Newly found sugar between stars offers clues to cosmic chemistry

The space between stars just got a little sweeter. Astronomers have detected a type of sugar in space that's also found in raspberries and self-tanners. The sugar, called ery...

Read full article →