
Anton Vasyunin leads the research group and laboratory.
Photo Credit: UrFU press service
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary
The Core Concept: Researchers have definitively identified nitrous oxide (N₂O), commonly known as "laughing gas," within the solid ice mantles coating dust particles around young protostars.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Unlike the gas phase of the interstellar medium—where over 300 molecules have been identified—molecules in the solid "ice" phase are notoriously difficult to detect and are only visible via infrared absorption spectra. N₂O is only the ninth molecule ever confirmed in this frozen state.
Origin/History:
- January 2026: Findings were reported by the Ural Federal University (UrFU) and published in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics.
- Methodology: The discovery relied on observational data from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), which was interpreted using laboratory-generated spectra of ice analogues created at UrFU's ISEAge laboratory.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Infrared Spectroscopy: The primary method used to detect molecular signatures in solid ices, requiring background starlight to "illuminate" the absorption features.
- Protostars: The study analyzed 50 young stars, finding N₂O in 16 of them.
- Orion Molecular Cloud: A specific region where half of the positive detections were located, suggesting that high-intensity ultraviolet radiation aids in N₂O formation.
Branch of Science: Astrochemistry, Astrophysics.
Future Application: These findings improve models of chemical evolution in the universe, helping scientists understand how complex volatiles form and survive in the raw materials that eventually coalesce into planetary systems.
Why It Matters: This discovery indicates that nitrous oxide is relatively abundant in star-forming regions (found in nearly a third of surveyed targets), adding a critical piece to the puzzle of how prebiotic chemistry develops in the freezing vacuum of space before planets are born.






.jpg)
.jpg)


.jpg)
.jpg)

