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  • When you drink water, youre drinking the most abundant element in the universe, but

  • what’s really going on with Hydrogen?

  • Hey guys, Amy here for DNews.

  • You might not think about it in such scientific terms, but you consume a lot of hydrogen,

  • and youre even made of hydrogen! Which is less creepy than it sounds; youre not

  • unknowingly a cyborg or anything.

  • Hydrogen is the simplest element with just one proton orbiting its nucleus, a simplistic

  • arrangement that allows it to hold the top spot on the periodic table of the elements.

  • It’s also the most abundant element in the universe with helium coming in at a distant

  • second.

  • When the Universe was a fraction of a second old, immediately after the Big Bang, it was

  • about 92% hydrogen atoms and 8% helium atoms by number which is roughly three-quarters

  • hydrogen by mass with trace amounts of other elements.

  • As the universe cooled, these early atoms stabilized and cooled into gas clouds that

  • eventually clumped together to form protostars. Those protostars got massive enough to develop

  • their own gravity, drawing other material into them, adding mass, pressure, and heat

  • until hydrogen atoms are able to fuse together to form helium. These became stars, the fusion

  • reaction making them bright.

  • Heavier elements are also formed inside stars, and when stars die and explode, they send

  • those heavier materials spewing throughout the universe where they were eventually incorporated

  • into new stars and protoplanets that became bodies like our Earth.

  • So all those elements that are in stars are in our planet as well, but not in the same

  • amounts. Hydrogen might be the most abundant element in the universe but it’s pretty

  • rare on Earth.

  • The name hydrogen comes from the Greek hydro meaning "water" and genes meaning "forming,"

  • so its existence is linked to water as you might expect; It’s the H in H20. But though

  • [a][b]the cells that make up our body have a high amount of water, hydrogen only makes

  • up less than 10 percent of the material in the carbon-based human body and less than

  • 0.15 percent of the material that makes up the Earth!

  • Our planet is rich in oxygen, nitrogenwhich are the most abundant elements in our atmosphere

  • and silicates, which make up the bulk of the material in the crust. Hydrogen is

  • largely found in compounds like water, and what hydrogen that does reach the Earth doesn’t

  • stick around; it escapes pretty quickly from the atmosphere. The Earth’s gravity just

  • can’t hold on to it.

  • But it’s immensely useful. Hydrogen is used in rocket fuel, welding, the production of

  • hydrochloric acid, and reducing metallic ores. And as a fuel, it’s a clean fuel. Hydrogen

  • carries energy without carbon in it, so when it burns it produces water as a byproduct.

  • But there’s a chance we could get hydrogen from elsewhere, namely off the planet, and

  • use it. Companies like Planetary Resources are looking at mining asteroids not for precious

  • metals but for elements like hydrogen that could be used to make fuel, literally fueling

  • space exploration and potentially vehicles on Earth as well.

  • If you want a basic breakdown of hydrogen, check out this video from our brand new show

  • TestTube 101!

  • So what do you guys think about hydrogen as a clean fuel. Is it worth tapping into the

  • literal universal stores?

  • Let us know in the comments below! Or let us know on Twitter @DNews, and I’m on there

  • as well as @astVitnageSpace. And of course, for more DNews every single day of the week,

  • don’t forget to subscribe!

When you drink water, youre drinking the most abundant element in the universe, but

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