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All topics / chemical evolution
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Chemical evolution

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1
thinkers
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2
books & papers
4
terms defined

The neighbourhood: chemical evolution and the ideas it travels with. Drag to roam, click a star for the episode, click a neighbour to travel.

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The lexicon

Every term the guests lean on, in plain language. Read one in full, or filter to find it.

    What the corpus says

    The throughline across every conversation that touches this idea.

    The universe is 13.8 billion years old, with first stars forming about 500 million years post-Big Bang.
    Supernovae from massive early stars enriched the universe with elements like carbon and oxygen.
    The James Webb Space Telescope is observing proto-galaxies and early supermassive black holes, capturing light 13 billion years old.
    Second-generation stars like HE13272326 suggest first stars exploded differently, yielding less iron and more carbon.
    Neutron star mergers are key sites for heavy element formation, confirmed by LIGO's 2017 gravitational wave detection.

    Voices on chemical evolution

    4 standout quotes from across the corpus.

    Go read

    2 books and papers cited across these episodes.

    For the specialist

    What experts find new

    2 expert-level takeaways for a specialist reader.

    At the frontier

    Still unresolved

    1 open questions flagged across these conversations.

    The thinkers

    Who takes this idea on, by how often they return to it.

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    Adjacent ideas