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You never know what astronomers will turn up next. In the case of a stellar nursery in the heart of the galaxy, they found ethyl formate — the molecule that gives raspberries their flavor. Since it smells a bit like rum, it’s been called the “raspberry rum” molecule.
B2 is a cloud of gas, dust, and young stars, about 400 light-years from the center of the Milky Way. It’s one of the biggest and busiest in the entire galaxy: It spans about 150 light-years, is eight million times the mass of the Sun, and has given birth to more than 30,000 stars. Most of the stars are small and faint, but a few are monsters — dozens of times the mass of the Sun.
The entire cloud is filled with complex molecules. B2 contains just about every molecule seen anywhere outside our solar system; about half of them were discovered there.
The list includes ethyl alcohol, formaldehyde, and a cyanide compound. Some of the molecules are among the chemical building blocks of amino acids, the building blocks of life. That includes the raspberry rum molecule — a sweet hint that the ingredients for life can be found in the stars.
B2 is about 27,000 light-years away, in Sagittarius. The constellation is low in the southeast at nightfall, and looks like a teapot. B2 is in the “steam” above the spout — a fragrant stellar nursery immersed in the glow of the Milky Way.
More about the center of the galaxy tomorrow.
Script by Damond Benningfield
Support McDonald Observatory
By Billy Henry4.6
251251 ratings
You never know what astronomers will turn up next. In the case of a stellar nursery in the heart of the galaxy, they found ethyl formate — the molecule that gives raspberries their flavor. Since it smells a bit like rum, it’s been called the “raspberry rum” molecule.
B2 is a cloud of gas, dust, and young stars, about 400 light-years from the center of the Milky Way. It’s one of the biggest and busiest in the entire galaxy: It spans about 150 light-years, is eight million times the mass of the Sun, and has given birth to more than 30,000 stars. Most of the stars are small and faint, but a few are monsters — dozens of times the mass of the Sun.
The entire cloud is filled with complex molecules. B2 contains just about every molecule seen anywhere outside our solar system; about half of them were discovered there.
The list includes ethyl alcohol, formaldehyde, and a cyanide compound. Some of the molecules are among the chemical building blocks of amino acids, the building blocks of life. That includes the raspberry rum molecule — a sweet hint that the ingredients for life can be found in the stars.
B2 is about 27,000 light-years away, in Sagittarius. The constellation is low in the southeast at nightfall, and looks like a teapot. B2 is in the “steam” above the spout — a fragrant stellar nursery immersed in the glow of the Milky Way.
More about the center of the galaxy tomorrow.
Script by Damond Benningfield
Support McDonald Observatory

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