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Late metal-silicate separation on the IAB parent asteroid: Constraints from combined W and Pt isotopes and thermal modelling

Abstract

The short-lived 182^{182}Hf-182^{182}W decay system is a powerful chronometer for constraining the timing of metal-silicate separation and core formation in planetesimals and planets. Neutron capture effects on W isotopes, however, significantly hamper the application of this tool. In order to correct for neutron capture effects, Pt isotopes have emerged as a reliable in-situ neutron dosimeter. This study applies this method to IAB iron meteorites, in order to constrain the timing of metal segregation on the IAB parent body. The ϵ182\epsilon^{182}W values obtained for the IAB iron meteorites range from -3.61 ±\pm 0.10 to -2.73 ±\pm 0.09. Correlating ϵi\epsilon^{\mathrm{i}}Pt with 182^{182}W data yields a pre-neutron capture 182^{182}W of -2.90 ±\pm 0.06. This corresponds to a metal-silicate separation age of 6.0 ±\pm 0.8 Ma after CAI for the IAB parent body, and is interpreted to represent a body-wide melting event. Later, between 10 and 14 Ma after CAI, an impact led to a catastrophic break-up and subsequent reassembly of the parent body. Thermal models of the interior evolution that are consistent with these estimates suggest that the IAB parent body underwent metal-silicate separation as a result of internal heating by short-lived radionuclides and accreted at around 1.4 ±\pm 0.1 Ma after CAIs with a radius of greater than 60 km.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables; open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (see http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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