clipped from: dsc.discovery.com   
Scientists have devised a way to use an infrared telescope to find diamonds in space.

Diamonds in the Sky

Unlike the rare terrestrial varieties that sparkle in jewelry, polish hard metals and give drill bits a cutting edge, celestial diamonds are ubiquitous, though extraordinarily petite. About 25,000 of them would fit in a grain of sand.


Still, because space diamonds are made of carbon, the building block of all life on Earth, studying them may help scientists understand how carbon-rich molecules develop.