UW News
The carbon in our bodies probably left the galaxy and came back on cosmic ‘conveyer belt’
University of Washington scientists recently discovered that the giant ‘conveyer belt’ currents that push star-forged material out of our galaxy and pull it back in can also transport carbon atoms. That means that a good deal of the carbon here on Earth, including the carbon in our bodies, likely left the galaxy at some point.
UW NEWSUW IN THE MEDIA
News mentions of the UW
- 2.5-billion-pixel Andromeda galaxy panorama worth the decade of Hubble observations | IFLScience5 hours ago
- 'Herculean' 2.5-billion-pixel mosaic shows our closest galactic neighbor like never before | Live Science6 hours ago
- What can you learn from dead birds? With enough volunteers, a lot | KUOW7 hours ago
OPINION AND ANALYSIS
Written by UW researchers, faculty and graduate students
- Opinion: Seattle innovation hub will help get climate tech off the ground | The Seattle Times23 hours ago
- Analysis: How constitutional guardrails have always contained presidential ambitions | The Conversation4 days ago
- Analysis: 4 reasons why the US might want to buy Greenland — if it were for sale, which it isn’t | The Conversation6 days ago
For Washington
The UW's RIDE program trains dentists to treat patients from rural and underserved communities. More than 80% of graduates go on to work in dental offices in small towns and communities. RIDE students study dentistry in Spokane and Seattle, as well as hands-on training in clinics in rural towns across Washington.
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