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STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Experiments trace interstellar dust back to solar system's formation
by Staff Writers
Manoa HI (SPX) Jun 13, 2018

This cometary-type interplanetary dust particle, L2005AR7, was collected by NASA stratospheric aircraft. Its porous aggregate structure is evident in this scanning electron microscope image.

A team of scientists led by University of Hawai'i at Manoa (UH Manoa) School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST) researcher Hope Ishii, discovered that certain interplanetary dust particles (IDPs) contain dust leftover from the initial formation of the solar system.

The initial solids from which the solar system formed consisted almost entirely of amorphous silicate, carbon and ices. This dust was mostly destroyed and reworked by processes that led to the formation of planets. Surviving samples of pre-solar dust are most likely to be preserved in comets - small, cold bodies that formed in the outer solar nebula.

In a relatively obscure class of IDPs believed to originate from comets, there are tiny glassy grains called GEMS, or glass embedded with metal and sulfides - typically only tens to hundreds of nanometers in diameter, less than 1/100th the thickness of human hair.

Using transmission electron microscopy, Ishii and colleagues made maps of the element distributions and discovered that these glassy grains are made up of subgrains that aggregated together in a different environment and prior to the formation of the comet parent body. This aggregate is encapsulated by carbon of a different type than the carbon that forms a matrix gluing together GEMS and other components of cometary dust.

The types of carbon that rims the subgrains and that forms the matrix in these particles decomposes with even weak heating, suggesting that the GEMS could not have formed in the hot inner solar nebula, and instead formed in a cold, radiation-rich environment, such as the outer solar nebula or pre-solar molecular cloud.

"Our observations suggest that these exotic grains represent surviving pre-solar interstellar dust that formed the very building blocks of planets and stars," said Ishii, who is based at the UH Manoa Hawai'i Institute of Geophysics and Planetology. "If we have at our fingertips the starting materials of planet formation from 4.6 billion years ago, that is thrilling and makes possible a deeper understanding of the processes that formed and have since altered them."

The University of Hawai'i has a strong footprint in space science and state-of-the-art instrumentation and is recognized as world-class in this field.

"This is an example of research that seeks to satisfy the human urge to understand our world's origins and serves the people of Hawai'i by boosting our reputation for excellence in space science and as a training ground for our students to be engaged in exciting science," said Ishii.

In the future, the team plans to search the interiors of additional comet dust particles, especially those that were well-protected during their passage through the Earth's atmosphere, to increase understanding of the distribution of carbon within GEMS and the size distributions of GEMS subgrains.

Research paper


Related Links
University of Hawaii at Manoa
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It


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Nanodiamonds explain mysterious source of Milky Way microwaves
Washington (UPI) Jun 11, 2018
Astronomers have discovered microscopic gemstones surrounding three infant star systems in the Milky Way. Researchers believe tiny diamonds account for the shimmer of cosmic microwave light that has puzzled astronomers for 20 years. The shimmer is known as anomalous microwave emission, or AME. For decades, scientists have struggled to explain why the odd glow emanates from several of the galaxy's protoplanetary disks. Until now, scientists thought the most likely culprit was a type of ca ... read more

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