Submitted by PHealthy t3_124xb33 in askscience
Seems like almost all instances of water in the galaxy, it is likely salt water but I really ask because I came across this article:
https://scitechdaily.com/alma-discovers-ordinary-table-salt-in-disk-surrounding-massive-star/
that's a lot of salt, yes?
adamginsburg t1_je1r14n wrote
As the author of the referenced paper: I actually still don't know how common salt is in the universe. Another poster noted the relative abundance of Na and Cl - we have a pretty good sense of how much of each of these elements are out there. But we can only see NaCl, the molecule, in special locations: the disks around high-mass stars (see also https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/#abs/2023ApJ...942...66G/abstract) and the dissipating envelopes of dying medium-mass stars (Asymptotic Giant Branch, AGB, stars). Otherwise, we think NaCl is present, but it is probably in the solid phase and doesn't produce any easily-observable radiation. When it's in the solid phase, it is part of dust grains, and I don't think we know exactly what it does in the dust (e.g., is it mixed with water in crystals? or stuck in some silicates? or something else?).
High-mass young star disks and AGB stars are unique in being very warm and dense, which are the conditions needed to have NaCl in the gas phase and able to produce observable millimeter-wavelength radiation. We might see it in one other place, in a hot molecular cloud, but that detection is not confirmed.
There are some other cool features of molecular salt: there might be salt clouds in hot jupiters, since salt can form at higher temperatures.