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Chawalit "Net" Charoenpong working in Jeff Seewald's lab.

Chawalit "Net" Charoenpong working in Jeff Seewald's lab.
Chawalit "Net" Charoenpong working in Jeff Seewald's lab.
Chawalit "Net" Charoenpong working in Jeff Seewald's lab.
Chawalit "Net" Charoenpong working in Jeff Seewald's lab.
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448544
Kleindinst, Thomas N.
Chawalit "Net" Charoenpong working in Jeff Seewald's lab.
Still Image
07/30/2018
_DSC9221.jpg
Image Of the Day caption:
Chawalit Charoenpong, a graduate student in the MIT-WHOI Joint Program, uses a blowtorch to heat up a bag made of gold as part of an experiment to learn more about how ammonia is produced at seafloor hydrothermal vents. Gold is malleable, can withstand high pressure and heat, and does not react with the other chemicals, making it a good container for use in a reactor at high temperatures and pressures similar to those at vents. Some microbes convert ammonia into amino acidskey building blocks for proteins and enzymes. Scientists theorize that the first life forms on Earth may have emerged at vents.
Photo by Tom Kleindinst
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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