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Glassware, Nucleotide Experiment, Ponnamperuma

Air and Space Museum

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    Object Details

    Manufacturer

    Cyril Ponnamperuma

    Summary

    Chemical apparatus built for experiments in the late 1960's by Cyril Ponnamperuma to investigate the synthesis of one of the sets of building blocks of life, the nuceotide bases, from gases thought to be present in the Earth's primordial atmosphere. The provenance of this artifact is uncertain. The amino acids as well as the bases that make up DNA and RNA are essential to life as we know it. It was proposed as early as the middle 1930's that the amino acids could have arisen from gases present in the Earth's early atmosphere. In 1952, Stanley Miller, a graduate student working with Harold Urey, circulated a mixture of water vapor, ammonia and methane gases thought to mimic that early atmosphere, past an electric discharge. At the end of a week he analyzed the product and found it to contain small amounts of the two simplest amino acids. Cyril Ponnamperuma and his group conducted a similar experiment in 1963 using electron beams as the source of energy. They observed the presence of adenine, one of the bases in DNA and RNA in the reaction mixture.

    Credit Line

    The family of Dr. Cyril Ponnamperuma

    Inventory Number

    A19790486000

    Restrictions & Rights

    Usage conditions apply

    Type

    INSTRUMENTS-Scientific

    Materials

    HAZMAT: Asbestos
    Glass
    Rubber

    Dimensions

    3-D: 69.8 × 34.3 × 24.8cm (2 ft. 3 1/2 in. × 1 ft. 1 1/2 in. × 9 3/4 in.)

    Country of Origin

    United States of America

    See more items in

    National Air and Space Museum Collection

    Data Source

    National Air and Space Museum

    Metadata Usage

    Not determined

    Link to Original Record

    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/nv9e91d813e-5994-4588-90c1-25f37fef09f1

    Record ID

    nasm_A19790486000

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