53 research outputs found
Growth of calcium-aluminum-rich inclusions by coagulation and fragmentation in a turbulent protoplanetary disk: observations and modelisation
Whereas it is generally accepted that calcium-aluminum-rich inclusions (CAIs)
from chondritic meteorites formed in a hot environment in the solar
protoplanetary disk, the conditions of their formation remain debated. Recent
laboratory studies of CAIs have provided new kind of data: their size
distributions. We show that size distributions of CAIs measured in laboratory
from sections of carbonaceous chondrites have a power law size distribution
with cumulative size exponent between -1.7 and -1.9, which translates into
cumulative size exponent between -2.5 and -2.8 after correction for sectioning.
To explain these observations, numerical simulations were run to explore the
growth of CAIs from micrometer to centimeter sizes, in a hot and turbulent
protoplanetary disk through the competition of coagulation and fragmentation.
We show that the size distributions obtained in growth simulations are in
agreement with CAIs size distributions in meteorites. We explain the CAI sharp
cut-off of their size distribution at centimeter sizes as the direct result
from the famous fragmentation barrier, provided that CAI fragment for impact
velocities larger than 10 m/s. The growth/destruction timescales of millimeter-
and centimeter-sized CAIs is inversely proportional to the local dust/gas ratio
and is about 10 years at 1300 K and up to 104 years at 1670K. This implies that
the most refractory CAIs are expected to be smaller in size owing to their long
growth timescale compared to less refractory CAIs. Conversely, the least
refractory CAIs could have been recycled many times during the CAI production
era which may have profound consequences for their radiometric age.Comment: Accepted in Icaru
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Oxygen Isotopes in Chondritic Interplanetary Dust: Parent-Bodies and Nebular Oxygen Reservoirs
Planetary objects have preserved various amounts of oxygen issued from isotopically different oxygen reservoirs reflecting their origin and physico-chemical history. An {sup 16}O-rich component is preserved in refractory inclusions (CAIs) whereas meteorites matrices are enriched in an {sup 16}O-poor component. The origin of these components is still unclear. The most recent models are based on isotope selective photodissociation of CO in a {sup 16}O-rich nebula/presolr cloud resulting in a {sup 16}O-poor gas in the outer part of the nebula. However because most meteorite components are thought to be formed in the inner 3AU of the solar nebula, the precise isotopic composition of outer solar system components is yet unknown. In that respect, the oxygen isotopic composition of cometary dust is a key to understand the origin of the solar system. The Stardust mission will bring back to the Earth dust samples from comet Wild2, a short period comet from the Jupiter family. A precise determination of the oxygen isotope composition of Wild2 dust grains is essential to decipher the oxygen reservoirs of the outer solar system. However, Stardust samples may be extremely fragmented upon impact in the collector. In addition, interplanetary dust particles (IDPs) collected in the stratosphere are likely to contain comet samples. Therefore, they started to investigate the oxygen isotopic composition of a suite of chondritic interplanetary dust particles that includes IDPs of potential cometary origin using a refined procedure to increase the lateral resolution for the analysis of Stardust grains or IDP subcomponents down to {approx} 3 {micro}m. High precision data for 4 IDPs were previously reported, here they have measured 6 additional IDPs
Evolution of oxygen isotopic composition in the inner solar nebula
Changes in the chemical and isotopic composition of the solar nebula with
time are reflected in the properties of different constituents that are
preserved in chondritic meteorites. CR carbonaceous chondrites are among the
most primitive of all chondrite types and must have preserved solar nebula
records largely unchanged. We have analyzed the oxygen and magnesium isotopes
in a range of the CR constituents of different formation temperatures and ages,
including refractory inclusions and chondrules of various types. The results
provide new constraints on the time variation of the oxygen isotopic
composition of the inner (<5 AU) solar nebula - the region where refractory
inclusions and chondrules most likely formed. A chronology based on the decay
of short-lived 26Al (t1/2 ~ 0.73 Ma) indicates that the inner solar nebula gas
was 16O-rich when refractory inclusions formed, but less than 0.8 Ma later, gas
in the inner solar nebula became 16O-poor and this state persisted at least
until CR chondrules formed ~1-2 Myr later. We suggest that the inner solar
nebula became 16O-poor because meter-size icy bodies, which were enriched in
17,18O due to isotopic self-shielding during the ultraviolet photo dissociation
of CO in the protosolar molecular cloud or protoplanetary disk, agglomerated
outside the snowline, drifted rapidly towards the Sun, and evaporated at the
snowline. This led to significant enrichment in 16O-depleted water, which then
spread through the inner solar system. Astronomical studies of the spatial
and/or temporal variations of water abundance in protoplanetary disks may
clarify these processes.Comment: 27 pages, 5 figure
The Preliminary Examination of Organics in the Returned Stardust Samples from Comet Wild 2
The primary objective of STARDUST is to collect coma samples from comet 8lP/Wild 2. These samples were collected by impact onto aerogel tiles on Jan 2, 2004 when the spacecraft flew through the comet's coma at a relative velocity of about 6.1 km/sec. Measurements of dust impacts on the front of the spacecraft suggest that the aerogel particle collector was impacted by 2800 +/- 500 particles larger than 15 micron in diameter. Following recovery of the Sample Return Capsule (SRC) on Jan 15, 2006, the aerogel collector trays will be removed in a clean room at JSC. After documentation of the collection, selected aerogel tiles will be removed and aerogel and cometary samples will be extracted for study. A number of different extraction techniques will be used, each optimized for the analytical technique that is to be used. The STARDUST Mission will carry out a 6 month preliminary examination (PE) of a small portion of the returned samples. The examination of the samples will be made by a number of subteams that will concentrate on specific aspects of the samples. One of these is the Organics PE Team (see the author list above for team members). These team members will use a number of analytical techniques to produce a preliminary characterization of the abundance and nature of the organics (if any) in the returned samples
Overview of the Results of the Organics PET Study of the Cometary Samples from Comet Wild 2 by the Stardust Mission
STARDUST is the first mission designed to bring samples back to Earth from a known comet. The captured samples were successfully returned to Earth on 15 Jan 2006, after which they were subjected to a preliminary examination by a number of teams of scientists from around the world. This abstract describes the efforts of the Organics Preliminary Examination Team (PET). More detailed discussions of specific analyses of the samples can be found in other papers presented at this meeting by individual members of the Organics PET (see the author list above for team members). The studied Wild 2 gas and dust samples were collected by impact onto aerogel tiles and Al foils when the spacecraft flew through the coma of 81P/Wild 2 on 2 Jan 2004 at a relative velocity of approx.6.1 kilometers per second. After recovery of the Sample Return Capsule (SRC) on 15 Jan 2006, the aerogel collector trays were removed in a clean room at JSC. After documentation of the collection, selected aerogel tiles and aluminum foils were removed and aerogel and cometary samples extracted for study
Organics Captured from Comet Wild 2 by the Stardust Spacecraft
Organics found in Comet Wild 2 samples show a heterogeneous and unequilibrated distribution in abundance and composition. Some are similar, but not identical, to those in interplanetary dust particles (IDPs) and carbonaceous meteorites. A new class of aromatic-poor organic material is also present. The organics are rich in O and N compared to meteoritic organics. Aromatic compounds are present, but the samples tend to be relatively poorer in aromatics than meteorites and IDPs. D and 15N suggest that some organics have an interstellar/protostellar heritage. While the variable extent of modification of these materials by impact capture is not yet fully constrained, a remarkably diverse suite of organic compounds is present and identifiable within the returned samples
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Light Element Isotopic Compositions of Cometary Matter Returned by the STARDUST Mission
Hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen isotopic compositions are heterogeneous among comet 81P/Wild2 particle fragments, however extreme isotopic anomalies are rare, indicating that the comet is not a pristine aggregate of presolar materials. Non-terrestrial nitrogen and neon isotope ratios suggest that indigenous organic matter and highly volatile materials were successfully collected. Except for a single circumstellar stardust grain, silicate and oxide minerals have oxygen isotopic compositions consistent with solar system origin. One refractory grain is {sup 16}O-enriched like refractory inclusions in meteorites, suggesting formation in the hot inner solar nebula and large-scale radial transport prior to comet accretion in the outer solar system
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Organics Captured from Comet Wild 2 by the Stardust Spacecraft
Organics found in Comet Wild 2 samples show a heterogeneous and unequilibrated distribution in abundance and composition. Some organics are similar, but not identical, to those in interplanetary dust particles (IDPs) and carbonaceous meteorites. A class of aromatic-poor organic material is also present. The organics are rich in O and N compared to meteoritic organics. Aromatic compounds are present, but the samples tend to be relatively poorer in aromatics than meteorites and IDPs. D and {sup 15}N suggest that some organics have an interstellar/protostellar heritage. While the variable extent of modification of these materials by impact capture is not yet fully constrained, a remarkably diverse suite of organic compounds is present and identifiable within the returned samples. Comets are small bodies that accreted in the outer Solar System during its formation (1) and thus may consist of preserved samples of the ''starting materials'' from which the Solar System was made. Organic materials are expected to be present in cometary samples (2) and may include molecules made and/or modified in stellar outflows, the interstellar medium, and the protosolar nebula, as well as by parent body processing within the comet. The presence of organic compounds in comets and their ejecta is of astrobiological interest since their delivery to the early Earth may have played an important role in the origin of life on Earth (3). An overview of the Stardust Mission and the collection and recovery of Wild 2 samples is provided elsewhere (4,5). We describe the results obtained from the returned samples by the Stardust Organics Preliminary Examination Team (PET). Samples were studied using a wide range of analytical techniques, including two-step laser desorption laser ionization mass spectrometry (L{sub 2}MS), Liquid Chromatography with UV Fluorescence Detection and Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry (LC-FD/TOF-MS), Scanning Transmission X-ray Microscopy (STXM), X-ray Absorption Near Edge Spectroscopy (XANES), infrared and Raman spectroscopy, Ion Chromatography with conductivity detection (IC), Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS), and Time-of-Flight Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) (6). These techniques provide a wealth of information about the chemical nature and relative abundance of the organics in the samples. Our results are compared to organic materials found in primitive meteorites and interplanetary dust particles (IDPs) collected in the stratosphere, well as to astronomical and spacecraft observations of comets. Despite some uncertainties associated with the presence of contaminants and alteration of the samples during the capture process, considerable information about the nature of the organics in the samples can be determined
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