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6/11/2017 ThisawesomeperiodictableshowstheoriginsofeveryatominyourbodyScienceAlert

This Awesome Periodic Table Shows The Origins of


Every Atom in Your Body
We are made of starstu.
BEC CREW 23 JAN 2017

Heres something to think about: the average adult human is made up of


7,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (7 octillion) atoms, and most of them are
hydrogen - the most common element in the Universe, produced by the Big Bang 13.8
billion years ago.

The rest of those atoms were forged by ancient stars merging and exploding billions of
years after the formation of the Universe, and a tiny amount can be attributed to
cosmic rays - high-energy radiation that mostly originates from somewhere outside the
Solar System.

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As astronomer Carl Sagan once said in an episode of Cosmos, "The nitrogen in our DNA,
the calcium in our teeth, the iron in our blood, the carbon in our apple pies were made
in the interiors of collapsing stars. We are made of starstu ."

To give you a better idea of where the ingredients for every living human came from,
Jennifer A. Johnson, an astronomer at the Ohio State University, put together this new
periodic table that breaks down all the elements according to their origin:

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Jennifer Johnson

To keep things relevant for the human body, Johnson explains that she cut a number of
elements from the bottom section.

"Tc, Pm, and the elements beyond U do not have long-lived or stable isotopes. I have
ignored the elements beyond U in this plot, but not including Tc and Pm looked weird,
so I have included them in grey,"Johnson explains on her blogwith the Sloan Digital Sky
Survey.

The new periodic table builds on work Johnson and her colleague, astronomer Inese
Ivans from the University of Utah, did back in 2008 - a project born out of equal
measures of frustration and procrastination.

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As you can see from the original version, it's been cleaned it up quite a bit since then:

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Jennifer Johnson/Inese Ivans

"This is what happens when you give two astronomers, who are tired of reminding
everyone about which elements go with which process [on] a periodic table, a set of
markers, and time when they should have been listening to talks," Johnson admits.

The periodic table works by identifying the six sources of elements in our bodies, and
breaks them down into the processes in the Universe that can give rise to new atoms:
Big Bang fusion; cosmic ray ssion; merging neutron stars; exploding massive stars;
dying low mass stars; and exploding white dwarf.

The way the corresponding colours ll up the boxes of elements shows roughly how
much of that element is the result of the various cosmic events.

So you can see that elements like oxygen (O), magnesium (Mg), and sodium (Na),
resulted fromgigantic explosionsof massive starscalled supernovae, which occur at
the end of a star's life, when it either runs out of fuel, or accumulates too much matter.

The incredible amount of energy and neutrons this releases allows elements to be
produced - a process known as nucleosynthesis - and distributed throughout the
Universe.

Old favourites like carbon (C) and nitrogen (N), on the other hand, exist mostly thanks to
low-mass stars ending their lives as white dwarfs.

Strange elements boron (B) and beryllium (Be), and some isotopes of lithium (Li) are
unique in their origins, because they're the result of high-energy particles called cosmic
rays that zoom through our galaxy at close to the speed of light.

Most cosmic rays originate from outside the Solar System, and sometimes even the
Milky Way, and when they collide with certain atoms, they give rise to new elements.

Interestingly, lithium is part of the reason why Johnson decided to distribute this new
periodic table in the rst place. If it's giving you a serious case of deja vu, it's because
there's a similar version on Wikipedia:

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Cmglee/Wikimedia

But, as Johnson explains, theWikipedia version is unclear in some places, and just plain
wrong in others.

She says the "large stars" and "small stars" in the Wikipedia version don't make much
sense, because nucleosynthesis has nothing to do with the radius of the stars, so we
have to assume they mean "high-mass stars" and "low-mass stars", respectively.

"High-mass stars end their lives (at least some of the time) as core-collapse supernovae.
Low-mass stars usually end their lives as white dwarfs," says Johnson.

"But sometimes, white dwarfs that are in binary systems with another star get enough
mass from the companion to become unstable and explode as so-called Type-Ia
supernovae. Which 'supernova' is being referred to in the Wikipedia graphic is not
clear."

There's also the problem with lithium:

"The information for Li is incorrect. [The isotope] 6Li is indeed made by cosmic rays
hitting other nuclei and breaking them apart. But most of the far more common 7Li
isotope is without question made in low-mass stars and spewed out into the Universe
as the star dies. Some 7Li is also made in the Big Bang, and a small fraction by cosmic
ray ssion."

Head over to Johnson's blog to access a higher resolution version of the periodic table,
and if you need a colour blind-friendly version, she's got you covered:

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Jennifer Johnson

H/T: Corey S. Powell

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