Where does gold come from David Lunney

In medieval times,

alchemists tried to achieve
the seemingly impossible.

They wanted to transform lowly lead
into gleaming gold.

History portrays these people
as aged eccentrics,

but if only they’d known that their
dreams were actually achievable.

Indeed, today we can
manufacture gold on Earth

thanks to modern inventions

that those medieval alchemists
missed by a few centuries.

But to understand how this precious metal

became embedded
in our planet to start with,

we have to gaze upwards at the stars.

Gold is extraterrestrial.

Instead of arising
from the planet’s rocky crust,

it was actually cooked up in space

and is present on Earth
because of cataclysmic stellar explosions

called supernovae.

Stars are mostly made up of hydrogen,
the simplest and lightest element.

The enormous gravitational pressure
of so much material

compresses and triggers nuclear fusion
in the star’s core.

This process releases energy
from the hydrogen,

making the star shine.

Over many millions of years,

fusion transforms hydrogen
into heavier elements:

helium, carbon, and oxygen,

burning subsequent elements faster
and faster to reach iron and nickel.

However, at that point nuclear fusion
no longer releases enough energy,

and the pressure from the core peters out.

The outer layers collapse into the center,

and bouncing back from this sudden
injection of energy,

the star explodes forming a supernova.

The extreme pressure
of a collapsing star is so high,

that subatomic protons and electrons
are forced together in the core,

forming neutrons.

Neutrons have no repelling electric charge

so they’re easily captured
by the iron group elements.

Multiple neutron captures enable
the formation of heavier elements

that a star under
normal circumstances can’t form,

from silver to gold,

past lead and on to uranium.

In extreme contrast to the million year
transformation of hydrogen to helium,

the creation of the heaviest
elements in a supernova

takes place in only seconds.

But what becomes of the gold
after the explosion?

The expanding supernova shockwave
propels its elemental debris

through the interstellar medium,

triggering a swirling dance
of gas and dust

that condenses into new stars and planets.

Earth’s gold was likely delivered this way

before being kneaded into veins
by geothermal activity.

Billions of years later, we now extract
this precious product by mining it,

an expensive process that’s compounded
by gold’s rarity.

In fact, all of the gold
that we’ve mined in history

could be piled into
just three Olympic-size swimming pools,

although this represents a lot of mass

because gold is about 20 times
denser than water.

So, can we produce more
of this coveted commodity?

Actually, yes.

Using particle accelerators, we can mimic
the complex nuclear reactions

that create gold in stars.

But these machines can only construct gold
atom by atom.

So it would take almost the age
of the universe to produce one gram

at a cost vastly exceeding
the current value of gold.

So that’s not a very good solution.

But if we were to reach
a hypothetical point

where we’d mined
all of the Earth’s buried gold,

there are other places we could look.

The ocean holds an estimated
20 million tons of dissolved gold

but at extremely miniscule concentrations
making its recovery too costly at present.

Perhaps one day, we’ll see gold rushes
to tap the mineral wealth

of the other planets of our solar system.

And who knows?

Maybe some future supernova
will occur close enough

to shower us with its treasure

and hopefully not eradicate
all life on Earth in the process.

在中世纪,

炼金术士试图
实现看似不可能的事情。

他们想把卑微的铅
变成闪闪发光的金子。

历史将这些人描绘成年长的
怪人,

但只要他们知道他们的
梦想实际上是可以实现的。

的确,今天我们可以
在地球上制造黄金,

这要归功于

那些中世纪炼金术士
错过了几个世纪的现代发明。

但要了解这种贵金属是如何

嵌入我们星球的,

我们必须仰望星空。

黄金是外星人。

它不是
来自地球的岩石地壳,

而是实际上是在太空中煮熟的,

并且由于称为超新星的灾难性恒星爆炸而存在于地球上

恒星主要由氢组成,氢
是最简单、最轻的元素。 如此多物质

的巨大引力

压紧并引发
恒星核心的核聚变。

这个过程从氢中释放能量

使恒星发光。

数百万年来,

聚变将氢
转化为更重的元素:

氦、碳和氧,

随后的元素
越来越快地燃烧以达到铁和镍。

然而,此时核聚变
不再释放足够的能量

,来自核心的压力逐渐减弱。

外层塌陷到中心,

从突然
注入的能量中反弹回来

,恒星爆炸形成超新星。

坍缩恒星的极端压力是如此之高,

以至于亚原子质子和电子
在核心中被迫聚集在一起,

形成中子。

中子没有排斥电荷,

因此它们很容易
被铁族元素捕获。

多次中子捕获

能够形成恒星在
正常情况下无法形成的较重元素,

从银到金,

从铅到铀。

与氢到氦的百万年转变形成鲜明对比的

是,超新星中最重元素的产生

只需几秒钟。

但是爆炸后的黄金会变成什么

膨胀的超新星冲击波
推动其元素碎片

穿过星际介质,

引发
气体和尘埃的漩涡舞蹈,并

凝结成新的恒星和行星。

地球的黄金在被地热活动揉成矿脉之前很可能是通过这种方式输送的

数十亿年后,我们现在
通过开采这种珍贵的产品来提取它,这

是一个昂贵的过程,
加上黄金的稀有性。

事实上
,我们在历史上开采的所有黄金

都可以堆积
在三个奥林匹克规模的游泳池中,

尽管这代表了很大的质量,

因为黄金的
密度大约是水的 20 倍。

那么,我们能否生产
更多这种令人垂涎的商品?

其实,是。

使用粒子加速器,我们可以模拟

在恒星中产生黄金的复杂核反应。

但这些机器只能
逐个原子地构造金。

因此
,生产一克黄金几乎需要宇宙的年龄,而

成本大大超过
黄金的当前价值。

所以这不是一个很好的解决方案。

但是,如果我们

假设我们已经开采
了地球上所有埋藏的黄金,

那么我们可以寻找其他地方。

海洋中估计有
2000 万吨溶解的黄金,

但浓度极低
,因此目前的回收成本太高。

也许有一天,我们会看到淘金热
来挖掘

我们太阳系其他行星的矿产资源。

谁知道呢?

也许未来的一些超新星
会发生在足够近的地方,

让我们用它的宝藏

倾泻而下,并希望
在这个过程中不会消灭地球上的所有生命。