Hf-W chronology of ordinary chondrites

1Jan L.Hellmann,1,2Thomas S.Kruijer,3James A.Van Orman,1Knut Metzler,1Thorsten Kleine
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (in Press) Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2019.05.040]
1Institut für Planetologie, University of Münster, Wilhelm-Klemm-Straße 10, 48149 Münster, Germany
2Nuclear & Chemical Sciences Division, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, 7000 East Avenue (L-231), Livermore, CA 94550, USA
3Department of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences, Case Western Reserve University, 10900 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA
Copyright Elsevier

Fifteen H, L, and LL ordinary chondrites of petrologic types 4 to 6 have been analyzed for Hf-W isotope systematics to constrain the chronology, internal structure, and thermal history of their parent bodies. For most samples coarse-grained metals plot below the isochrons defined by silicate-dominated fractions which consist of variable mixtures of silicate minerals with tiny metal inclusions. This offset results from an earlier Hf-W closure in the large metal grains and provides a new means for simultaneously determining cooling rates and Hf-W closure ages for individual samples. For most type 5 and 6 samples, cooling rates and Hf-W ages are inversely correlated, indicating that these samples derive from concentrically zoned bodies in which more strongly metamorphosed samples derive from greater depth. These data, therefore, provide strong evidence for a common ‘onion shell’ structure for the H, L, and LL chondrite parent bodies. The cooling rates and Hf-W ages of some type 5 and 6 chondrites overlap, indicating that the Hf-W systematics provide a more robust measure of the thermal history and burial depth of a given sample than the simple petrographic distinction between types 5 and 6. Two type 6 samples deviate from the correlation between cooling rates and Hf-W ages and cooled much faster than expected for their Hf-W age. These samples likely were excavated by impacts that occurred during high-temperature metamorphism and prior to complete closure of the Hf-W system at ∼10 Ma after CAI formation. As these impacts would have disturbed the asteroid’s cooling history, these samples likely derive from different bodies than samples with undisturbed cooling histories, implying that ordinary chondrites derive from more than just three parent bodies. The Hf-W data reveal that metal-silicate fractionation among the H, L, and LL groups occurred between ∼2 and ∼2.7 Ma after CAI formation and, hence, was about coeval to chondrule formation. As both metal-silicate fractionation and chondrule formation occurred prior to chondrite parent body accretion, there should be no ordinary chondrite chondrules that are younger than ∼2.7 Ma. Finally, ordinary chondrite precursors had lower Hf/W ratios than carbonaceous chondrites, suggesting that inner and outer solar system materials, respectively, were chemically distinct even for refractory elements.

Lewis Cliff 86211 and 86498: Metal-Sulfide Liquid Segregates from a Carbonaceous Chondrite Impact Melt

1,2Nicole G.Lunning,1Timothy J.Mccoy,3,4Devin L.Schrader,5Kazu Nagashima,1Catherine M.Corrigan,2JulianeGross,6AlfredKracher
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (in Press) Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2019.05.032]
1Department of Mineral Sciences, Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC 20560, USA
2Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Rutgers, State University of New Jersey, 610 Taylor Road, Piscataway, NJ 08854-8066, USA
3Center for Meteorite Studies, Arizona State University, Tempe AZ 85287
4School of Earth and Space Exploration, Arizona State University, Tempe AZ 85287
5Hawai‘i Institute of Geophysics & Planetology, University of Hawai‘i at Manoa, 1680 East-West Road, POST 602 Honolulu, HI 96822 USA
615837 Garden View Dr., Apple Valley, MN 55124-7006 USA1
Copyright Elsevier

The petrogenesis of the ungrouped iron meteorite Lewis Cliffs (LEW) 86211 and its proposed pair LEW 86498 has remained elusive in the decades since their discovery in Antarctica. Wasson, 1990, Kracher et al., 1998 noted the enrichment in the siderophile refractory elements, fine-grained texture, and high abundances of sulfides in LEW 86211 as features that are both difficult to explain and that set it apart from other iron meteorites. In this work, we investigate the pairing and formation of these two ungrouped iron meteorites using a combination of petrography, electron microprobe analyses, and secondary ion probe analyses of oxygen-three isotope of olivine. Similarities in petrographic features and phase compositions further support the initial pairing of LEW 86211 and 86498. The bulk composition of LEW 86211 (Wasson, 1990) closely resembles those of separated chondritic metallic components (e.g., Kong and Ebihara, 1997), which indicates this pairing group formed directly from this portion of a chondrite. The metal-sulfide cellular textures and mineral compositional trends are consistent with LEW 86211 and 86498 forming by rapid cooling of the FeNiS immiscible liquid of a larger chondritic impact melt unit. Previous bulk oxygen-three isotope analyses (Clayton and Mayeda, 1996) combined with the in situ oxygen-three isotope analyses from this work are consistent with LEW 86211 having a carbonaceous chondrite provenance. LEW 86211 is most similar to CR chondrites in its oxygen-three isotope signatures, but may not be from an established carbonaceous chondrite group. The silicate inclusions in LEW 86211 and 86498 record evidence of pre-impact metamorphism and later reduction related to contact with the metal-sulfide impact melt liquid. The silicate inclusions appear to have been engulfed by metal-sulfide liquids rather than part of the impact melted unit. Additionally, the size of this sulfide-dominated pairing group compared to the volume of sulfides and metal in unmelted CR chondrite suggests that these meteorites originated from a much larger carbonaceous chondrite impact melt body than has been previously recognized (e.g., Lunning et al., 2016).

A Hypothesis for the Rapid Formation of Planets

Susanne Pfalzner1,2 and Michele T. Bannister3
Astrophysical Journal Letters 874, L34 Link to Article [DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/ab0fa0]
1Jülich Supercomputing Center, Forschungszentrum Jülich, D-52428 Jülich, Germany
2Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie, Auf dem Hügel 69, D-53121 Bonn, Germany
3Astrophysics Research Centre, Queen’s University Belfast, Belfast BT7 1NN, UK

The discovery of 1I/’Oumuamua confirmed that planetesimals must exist in great numbers in interstellar space. Originally generated during planet formation, they are scattered from their original systems and subsequently drift through interstellar space. As a consequence they should seed molecular clouds with at least hundred-meter-scale objects. We consider how the galactic background density of planetesimals, enriched from successive generations of star and system formation, can be incorporated into forming stellar systems. We find that at a minimum of the order of 107 ‘Oumuamua-sized and larger objects, plausibly including hundred-kilometer-scale objects, should be present in protoplanetary disks. At such initial sizes, the growth process of these seed planetesimals in the initial gas- and dust-rich protoplanetary disks is likely to be substantially accelerated. This could resolve the tension between accretionary timescales and the observed youth of fully fledged planetary systems. Our results strongly advocate that the population of interstellar planetesimals should be taken into account in future studies of planet formation. As not only the Galaxy’s stellar metallicity increased over time but also the density of interstellar objects, we hypothesize that this enriched seeding accelerates and enhances planetary formation after the first couple of generations of planetary systems.

Was the Sun a Slow Rotator? Sodium and Potassium Constraints from the Lunar Regolith

Prabal Saxena1,2, Rosemary M. Killen1, Vladimir Airapetian1,3, Noah E. Petro1, Natalie M. Curran1,4, and Avi M. Mandell1
Astrophysical Journal Letters 876, L16 Link to Article [DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/ab18fb]
1NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD 20771, USA
2CREST II/University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA
3American University, Washington, DC 20016, USA
4USRA, Columbia, MD, 21046, USA

While the Earth and Moon are generally similar in composition, a notable difference between the two is the apparent depletion in moderately volatile elements in lunar samples. This is often attributed to the formation process of the Moon, and it demonstrates the importance of these elements as evolutionary tracers. Here we show that paleo space weather may have driven the loss of a significant portion of moderate volatiles, such as sodium and potassium, from the surface of the Moon. The remaining sodium and potassium in the regolith is dependent on the primordial rotation state of the Sun. Notably, given the joint constraints shown in the observed degree of depletion of sodium and potassium in lunar samples and the evolution of activity of solar analogs over time, the Sun is highly likely to have been a slow rotator. Because the young Sun’s activity was important in affecting the evolution of planetary surfaces, atmospheres, and habitability in the early Solar System, this is an important constraint on the solar activity environment at that time. Finally, as solar activity was strongest in the first billion years of the Solar System, when the Moon was most heavily bombarded by impactors, evolution of the Sun’s activity may also be recorded in lunar crust and would be an important well-preserved and relatively accessible record of past Solar System processes.

Laboratory synthesis and spectroscopic studies of hydrated Al-sulfates relevant to Mars

1Haijun Cao,1Jian Chen,1Zongcheng Ling
Icarus (in Press) Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2019.05.039]
1Shandong Provincial Key Laboratory of Optical Astronomy & Solar-Terrestrial Environment, Institute of Space Sciences, Shandong University, Weihai 264209, China
Copyright Elsevier 

Orbital remote sensing has recently identified alunite as one of the types of Al-sulfate on Mars. As other types of hydrated Al-sulfates may also exist abundantly in the soil and rocks on Mars, it is important to perform systematic experimental investigations of the spectral characterization of hydrous Al-sulfates to identify and determine their potential distribution on Mars. We successfully used the humidity buffer technique to synthesize five alunogen series of Al-sulfates, Al2(SO4)3·xH2O (x = 0, 4, 8, 12, 14) and AlH(SO4)2·H2O, with different degrees of hydration. X-ray diffraction (XRD) was used to identify them from the PDF 2004 database, except for the species with 12 structural water molecules; the quantity of structural water in the latter was confirmed by thermogravimetry and differential scanning calorimetry measurements after heating to >500 °C. Raman, mid-infrared (MIR), and visible and near-infrared (VNIR) spectra were acquired to evaluate vibrational spectroscopic properties related to crystal structure. The prominent ν1 modes of SO4 tetrahedra of six Al-sulfates from Raman and MIR spectra have obvious shifts to higher wavenumbers (from 993.4 to 1133.6 cm−1) with decrease in hydration state. With no absorption bands from 250 to 1000 nm, all absorption features of the VNIR spectra of alunogen series of Al-sulfates are derived from overtones and combinations of fundamental vibrational modes from OH/H2O and SO4 groups, generally showing a red shift toward longer wavelengths with increasing hydration state. The XRD, Raman, MIR, and VNIR spectroscopic data of these Al-sulfates can provide crucial data supporting their identification for future remote sensing and in situ detection on Mars.

3-μm reflectance spectroscopy of carbonaceous chondrites under asteroid-like conditions

1Driss Takir,2Karen R.Stockstill-Cahill,2Charles A.Hibbitts,3Yusuke Nakauchi
Icarus (in Press) Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2019.05.012]
1Jacobs/ARES, NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX 77058-3696, USA
2Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel, MD 20273, USA
3JAXA Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, Sagamihara, Japan
Copyright Elsevier

We measured 3-μm reflectance spectra of 21 meteorites that represent all carbonaceous chondrite types available in terrestrial meteorite collections. The measurements were conducted at the Laboratory for Spectroscopy under Planetary Environmental Conditions (LabSPEC) at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (JHU APL) under vacuum and thermally-desiccated conditions (asteroid-like conditions). This is the most comprehensive 3-μm dataset of carbonaceous chondrites ever acquired in environments similar to the ones experienced by asteroids. The 3-μm reflectance spectra are extremely important for direct comparisons with and appropriate interpretations of reflectance data from ground-based telescopic and spacecraft observations of asteroids. We found good agreement between 3-μm spectral characteristics of carbonaceous chondrites and carbonaceous chondrite classifications. The 3-μm band is diverse, indicative of varying composition, thus suggesting that these carbonaceous chondrites experienced distinct parent body aqueous alteration and metamorphism environments. The spectra of CI chondrites, from which significant amount of water adsorbed under ambient conditions was removed, are consistent with Mg-serpentine and clay minerals. The high abundances of organics in CI chondrites is also associated with the mineralogy of these chondrites, oxyhydroxides- and complex clay minerals-rich. CM chondrites, which are cronstedtite-rich, have shallower 3-μm band than CI chondrites, suggesting they experienced less aqueous alteration. CR chondrites showed moderate aqueous alteration relative to CI and CM chondrites. CV chondrites, except for Efremovka, have a very shallow 3-μm band, consistent with their lower phyllosilicate proportions. CO chondrites, like most CVs, have a very shallow 3-μm band that suggest they experienced minor aqueous alteration. The 3-μm band in CH/CBb is deep and broad centered ~3.11 μm, possibly due to the high abundance of FeNi metal and presence of heavily hydrated clasts in these chondrites. The 3-μm spectra of Essebi (C2-ung) and EET 83226 are more consistent with CM chondrites’ spectra. The 3-μm spectra of Tagish lake (C2-ung), on the other hand, are consistent with CI chondrites. None of these spectral details could have been resolved without removing the adsorbed water before acquiring spectra.

Effect of iron content on thermal conductivity of olivine with implications for cooling history of rocky planets

1Youyue Zhang,1Takashi Yoshino,1Akira Yoneda,2Masahiro Osako
Earth and Planetary Science Letters 519, 109-119 Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2019.04.048]
1Institute for Planetary Materials, Okayama University, Misasa, Tottori 682-0193, Japan
2National Museum of Nature and Science, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-0005, Japan
Copyright Elsevier

The influence of Fe concentration on heat transport properties of olivine was investigated to understand the cooling history of rocky planets such as Mercury, Mars and asteroids. Thermal conductivity (λ) and thermal diffusivity (κ) were measured simultaneously for olivine polycrystal with different Fe contents (Fo, Fo90, Fo70, Fo50, Fo31 and Fo0) up to 10 GPa and 1100 K by a pulse heating method. With increasing Fe in olivine, thermal conductivity of olivine first decreases and then slightly increases. The minimum λ was found to be at composition near Fo31; the absolute λ value of Fo31 is about 65% lower than that of Fo. Small amounts of Fe in olivine can strongly reduce the thermal conductivity at low temperature; λ value of Fo90 is about 50% of Fo at room temperature. Thermal conductivities of polycrystalline olivine have smaller absolute values and weaker pressure and temperature dependences, compared with those of natural single crystal olivine determined by previous studies. Heat capacity of Fo70 and Fo50 calculated from λ and κ is independent of pressure and is controlled by nearly constant thermal expansion coefficient with increasing temperature. Smaller λ of olivine aggregate with high Fe content would produce a warmer mantle and, in turn, possibly a thicker crust in the Fe-rich Mars, while heat in the Fe-poor Mercury can escape faster than the other terrestrial planets. Olivine-dominant asteroids with high Fe concentration could have longer cooling history and lower thermal inertia on the surface.

The composition and mineralogy of rocky exoplanets: A survey of >4000 stars from the Hypatia Catalog

1Keith D. Putirka,1John C. Rarick
American Mineralogist 104, 817-829 Link to Article [http://www.minsocam.org/MSA/AmMin/TOC/2019/Abstracts/AM104P0817.pdf]
1Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Fresno State, 2345 E. San Ramon Avenue, MS/MH24, Fresno, California 93720, U.S.A.
Copyright: The Mineralogical Society of America

Combining occurrence rates of rocky exoplanets about sun-like stars, with the number of such stars that occupy possibly hospitable regions of the Milky Way, we estimate that at least 1.4 × 108 near-Earthsized planets occupy habitable orbits about habitable stars. This number is highly imprecise to be sure, and it is likely much higher, but it illustrates that such planets are common, not rare. To test whether such rocky exoplanets might be geologically similar to Earth, we survey >4000 star compositions from the Hypatia Catalog—the most compositionally broad of such collections. We find that rocky exoplanets will have silicate mantles dominated by olivine and/or orthopyroxene, depending upon Fe partitioning during core formation. Some exoplanets may be magnesiowüstite- or quartz-saturated, and we present a new classification scheme based on the weight percent ratio (FeO+MgO)/SiO2, to differentiate rock types. But wholly exotic mantle mineralogies should be rare to absent; many exoplanets will have a peridotite mantle like Earth, but pyroxenite planets should also be quite common. In addition, we find that half or more of the range of exoplanet mantle mineralogy is possibly controlled by core formation, which we model using αFe = FeBSP/FeBP, where FeBSP is Fe in a Bulk Silicate Planet (bulk planet, minus core), on a cation weight percent basis (elemental weight proportions, absent anions) and FeBP is the cation weight percent of Fe for a Bulk Planet. This ratio expresses, in this case for Fe, the fraction of an element that is partitioned into the silicate mantle relative to the total amount available upon accretion. In our solar system, αFe varies from close to 0 (Mercury) to about 0.54 (Mars). Remaining variations in theoretical exoplanet mantle mineralogy result from non-trivial variations in star compositions. But we also find that Earth is decidedly non-solar (non-chondritic); this is not a new result, but appears worth re-emphasizing, given that current discussions often still use carbonaceous or enstatite chondrites as models of Bulk Earth. While some studies emphasize the close overlap of some isotope ratios between certain meteoritic and terrestrial (Earth-derived) samples, we find that major oxides of chondritic meteorites do not precisely explain bulk Earth. To allow Earth to be chondritic (or solar), there is the possibility that Earth contains a hidden component that, added to known reservoirs, would yield a solar/chondritic bulk Earth. We test that idea using a mass balance of major oxides using known reservoirs, so that the sum of upper mantle, metallic core, and crust, plus a hidden component, yields a solar bulk composition. In this approach, the fractions of crust and core are fixed and the hidden mantle component, Fh, is some unknown fraction of the entire mantle (so if FDM is the fraction of depleted mantle, then Fh + FDM = 1). Such mass balance shows that if a hidden mantle component were to exist, it must comprise >28% of Earth’s mantle, otherwise it would have negative abundances of TiO2 and Al2O3. There is no clear upper limit for such a component, so it could comprise the entire mantle. But all estimates from Fh = 0.28 to Fh = 1.0 yield a hidden fraction that does not match the inferred sources of ocean island or mid-ocean ridge basalts, and would be geologically unusual, having higher Na2O, Cr2O3, and FeO and lower CaO, MgO, and Al2O3 compared to familiar mantle components. We conclude that such a hidden component does not exist.

Predicted diurnal variation of the deuterium to hydrogen ratio in water at the surface of Mars caused by mass exchange with the regolith

1,2Renyu Hu
Earth and Planetary Science Letters 519, 192-201 Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2019.05.017]
1Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91109, USA
2Division of Planetary and Geological Science, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA
Copyright Elsevier

Regolith on Mars exchanges water with the atmosphere on a diurnal basis and this process causes significant variation in the abundance of water vapor at the surface. While previous studies of regolith-atmosphere exchange focus on the abundance, recent in-situ experiments and remote sensing observations measure the isotopic composition of the atmospheric water. We are therefore motivated to investigate isotopic water exchange between the atmosphere and the regolith and determine its effect on the deuterium to hydrogen ratio (D/H) of the atmosphere. We model transport of water in the regolith and regolith-atmosphere exchange by solving a transport equation including regolith adsorption, condensation, and diffusion. The model calculates equilibrium fractionation between HDO and H2O in each of these processes. The fractionation in adsorption is caused by the difference in the latent heat of adsorption, and that of condensation is caused by the difference in the vapor pressure. Together with a simple, bulk-aerodynamic boundary layer model, we simulate the diurnal variation of the D/H near the planetary surface. We find that the D/H can vary by 300–1400‰ diurnally in the equatorial and mid-latitude locations, and the magnitude is greater at a colder location or season. The variability is mainly driven by adsorption and desorption of regolith particles, and its diurnal trend features a drop in the early morning, a rise to the peak value during the daytime, and a second drop in the late afternoon and evening, tracing the water vapor flow into and out from the regolith. The predicted D/H variation can be tested with in-situ measurements. As such, our calculations suggest stable isotope analysis to be a powerful tool in pinpointing regolith-atmosphere exchange of water on Mars.

Metal segregation in planetesimals: Constraints from experimentally determined interfacial energies

1A.Néri,1J.Guignard,1M.Monnereau,1M.J.Toplis,1G.Quitté
Earth and Planetary Science Letters 518, 40-52 Link to Article [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2019.04.049]
1IRAP, Université de Toulouse, CNRS, CNES, UPS, Toulouse, France
Copyright Elsevier

High temperature experiments have been performed to constrain interfacial energies in a three-phase system (metal–forsterite–silicate melt) representative of partially differentiated planetesimals accreted early in the solar system history, with the aim of providing new insights into the factors affecting the interconnection threshold of metal-rich phases. Experiments were run under controlled oxygen fugacity (ΔNi-NiO=−3) at 1440 °C, typically for 24 h. Quantification of the true dihedral angles requires a resolution of at least 30 nm per pixel in order to reveal small-angle wedges of silicate melt at crystal interfaces. At this level of resolution, dihedral angle distributions of silicate melt and olivine appear asymmetric, an observation interpreted in terms of anisotropy of olivine crystals. Based upon the theoretical relation between dihedral angles and interfacial energies in a three-phase system, the relative magnitudes of interfacial energies have been determined to be: γMelt-Ol<γMelt-Ni<γOl-Ni. This order differs from that obtained with experiments using an iron sulfide liquid close to the Fe–FeS eutectic for which γMelt-Sulfide<γMelt-Ol<γOl-Sulfide, implying a lower interconnection threshold for sulfur-rich melts than for pure metallic phases. This dependence of the interconnection threshold on the sulfur content will affect the drainage of metallic phases during melting of small bodies. Assuming a continuous extraction of silicate melt, evolution of the metal volume fraction has been modeled. Several sulfur-rich melts extraction events are possible over a range of temperatures relevant with thermometric data on primitive achondrites (1200–1400 °C and 25% of silicate melt extracted). These successive events provide novel insight into the variability of sulfur content in primitive achondrites, which are either representative of a region that experienced sulfide extraction or from a region that accumulated sulfide melt from overlying parts of the parent body.