Is the water we drink older than the sun?

Some of the water molecules in your drinking glass were created more than 4.5 billion years ago, according to new research. That makes them older than the Earth, older than the solar system — even older than the sun itself.
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Is water older than the sun?

As much as half of the water in Earth's oceans could be older than the Sun, a study has found.
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How old is water that we drink?

The water on our Earth today is the same water that's been here for nearly 5 billion years. So far, we haven't managed to create any new water, and just a tiny fraction of our water has managed to escape out into space. The only thing that changes is the form that water takes as it travels through the water cycle.
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How old is fresh water?

Four years ago a short article about the age of the water we drink every day probably comes closest to dating the age of water. Bharath Keshav wrote, “A fascinating new study suggests that some of the water molecules we drink and bathe in are [very] old, as in more than 4.6 billion years old.
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Can you drink million year old water?

The next question: Is it drinkable? The answer: Not really, but a sip won't kill you. According to an interview in the Los Angeles Times, one of the paper's authors, Barbara Sherwood Lollar, has tasted it, and it was "terrible," she reports. "It is much saltier than seawater."
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The Water You Drink Might Be Older Than The Sun



What is older than the Sun?

One grain is more than 3 billion years older than the Sun, which, at more than 7 billion years, makes it the oldest solid material on Earth. These results were published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America on 13 January.
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Will we run out of water in 2050?

Assuming a World average water consumption for food of 1,300 m3/year per capita in 2000, 1,400 m3/year in 2050, and 1,500 m3/year in 2100, a volume of water of around 8,200 km3/year was needed in 2000, 13,000 km3/year will be needed in 2050, and 16,500 km3/year in 2100.
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Do we drink the same water as dinosaurs?

– Yes. The water on our Earth today is the same water that's been here for nearly 5 billion years. Only a tiny bit of it has escaped out into space. As far as we know, new water hasn't formed either.
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What is the oldest thing in the universe?

Astronomers have confirmed the discovery of one the oldest and most distant objects ever known in the universe — a star-forming galaxy 12.8 billion light-years away that started forming within a billion years of the Big Bang that kickstarted everything.
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How did water end up on Earth?

Currently, the most favored explanation for where the Earth got its water is that it acquired it from water-rich objects (planetesimals) that made up a few percent of its building blocks. These water-rich planetesimals would have been either comets or asteroids.
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How old is dirt on Earth?

Earth's dirt is one of the things that sets it apart from the other rocky lifeless planets out there. But geologically speaking soil hasn't really been around that long. Earth is 4.54 billion years old, and yet the rich reddy-brown sediments that we think of as soil didn't appear until 450 million years ago.
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Is water made out of pee?

Water makes up 91 to 96 percent of your urine. The rest is made from salts, ammonia, and byproducts produced during normal body processes. Your urinary tract extends from your kidneys to your urethra.
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How did dinosaurs pee?

To get this out of the way: yes, dinosaurs apparently did urinate. For years, scientists figured that dinosaurs, like most of their avian descendants, evacuated liquid and solid waste in a single stream from an orifice called the cloaca.
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Can you drink sea water if boiled?

Desalination is the process of removing salt from seawater, making it drinkable. This is done either by boiling the water and collecting the vapor (thermal) or by pushing it through special filters (membrane).
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Can we create water?

Yes, it is possible to make water. Water is made of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. The process to combine hydrogen and oxygen is very dangerous though. Hydrogen is flammable and oxygen feeds flames, so the reaction to create water often results in an explosion.
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Is Earth losing water?

Water flows endlessly between the ocean, atmosphere, and land. Earth's water is finite, meaning that the amount of water in, on, and above our planet does not increase or decrease.
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When was water made on Earth?

Mineralogical evidence from zircons has shown that liquid water and an atmosphere must have existed 4.404 ± 0.008 billion years ago, very soon after the formation of Earth.
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Does sun have water?

As strange as it may seem, yes water has been detected on the Sun. Actually what was detected is 'steam' over a particularly cool sunspot where the temperatures were only about 1000 K or so. Return to the Ask the Space Scientist main page.
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Can water be in rocks?

Scientists say massive amounts of water exist deep beneath the planet's surface, locked inside the molecular structure of minerals in the mantle.
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Can you drink ancient water?

The water left overnight or for a long period of time in an open glass or container is home to numerous bacterias and is not safe for drinking. You never know how much dust, debris, and other small microscopic particles might have passed into that glass. Water left in a bottle for a long time is not safe to drink.
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Why is pee yellow?

Normal urine color ranges from pale yellow to deep amber — the result of a pigment called urochrome and how diluted or concentrated the urine is. Pigments and other compounds in certain foods and medications can change your urine color. Beets, berries and fava beans are among the foods most likely to affect the color.
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Why do we pee when we poop?

When you do pass stool however, the relaxation of the stronger anal sphincter also decreases tension in the weaker urinary sphincter, allowing urine to pass at the same time.
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