2 research outputs found
Additional file 1 of Rare earth element identification and quantification in millimetre-sized Ryugu rock fragments from the Hayabusa2 space mission
Additional file1: Figure S1 XRF spectra corresponding to the measurements in points 1 to 4 in rock fragment C0076 (600 s/pt). XRF spectra were normalised for the TaâKα signal intensity to provide more straightforward comparison. Magnified inserts of two select energy ranges marked by dashed bounding boxes in light blue and red are displayed in parts B and C, respectively. Figure S2 CT slices that were obtained at SPring-8 beamline 20X (Nakamura et al. 2022b) show the positions of the points of interest indicated in Figure A1 in Ryugu rock fragment C0076. A red arrow marks the primary X-ray beam path and direction, fluorescence detector was positioned at the left of the CT image. Yellow circles indicate the Ca-rich grains (point 1) from which REE information is primarily obtained. Points 2â4 are matrix measurements and as such have no distinct Ca-rich grains. Separate grains along the beam path are indicated by their respective size along the beam path in orange, along with an estimate of the mineralogical phase for the larger grains
Electron microscopy observations of the diversity of Ryugu organic matter and its relationship to minerals at the microâ to nanoâscale
Transmission electron microscopy analyses of Hayabusa2 samples show that Ryugu organic matter exhibits a range of morphologies, elemental compositions, and carbon functional chemistries consistent with those of carbonaceous chondrites that have experienced lowâtemperature aqueous alteration. Both nanoglobules and diffuse organic matter are abundant. Nonâglobular organic particles are also present, and including some that contain nanodiamond clusters. Diffuse organic matter is finely distributed in and around phyllosilicates, forms coatings on other minerals, and is also preserved in vesicles in secondary minerals such as carbonate and pyrrhotite. The average elemental compositions determined by energyâdispersive spectroscopy of extracted, demineralized insoluble organic matter samples A0107 and C0106 are C100N3O9S1 and C100N3O7S1, respectively, with the difference in O/C slightly outside the difference in the standard error of the mean. The functional chemistry of the nanoglobules varies from mostly aromatic C=C to mixtures of aromatic C=C, ketone C=O, aliphatic (CHn), and carboxyl (COOH) groups. Diffuse organic matter associated with phyllosilicates has variable aromatic C, ketone and carboxyl groups, and some localized aliphatics, but is dominated by molecular carbonate (CO3) absorption, comparable to prior observations of clayâbound organic matter in CI meteorites.</p