Scientists Find Carbon-Carrying Meteorites |
| Written by spacetravel.org | |||
| Sunday, 07 May 2006 14:25 | |||
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The researchers used a microscopic imaging technique to analyze the isotopic composition of insoluble organic matter from six carbonaceous chondrite meteoritesthe oldest type known. The relative proportion of isotopes of nitrogen and hydrogen associated with the insoluble organic matter act as fingerprints and can reveal how and when the carbon was formed. The isotope of nitrogen that is most often found in nature is 14N; its heavier sibling is 15N. Differing amounts of 15N, in addition to a heavier form of hydrogen called deuterium, (D), allow researchers to tell if a particle is relatively unaltered from the time when the solar system was first forming. The tell-tale signs are lots of deuterium and 15N chemically bonded to carbon, commented co-author Larry Nittler. We have known for some time, for instance, that interplanetary dust particles (IDP), collected from high-flying airplanes in the upper atmosphere, contain huge excesses of these isotopes, probably indicating vestiges of organic material that formed in the interstellar medium. The IDPs have other characteristics indicating that they originated on bodiesperhaps cometsthat have undergone less severe processing than the asteroids from which meteorites originate. The scientists found that some meteorite samples, when examined at the same tiny scales as interplanetary dust particles, actually have similar or even higher abundances of 15N and D than those reported for IDPs. Its amazing that pristine organic molecules associated with these isotopes were able to survive the harsh and tumultuous conditions present in the inner solar system when the meteorites that contain them came together, reflected co-author Conel Alexander. It means that the parent bodiesthe comets and asteroidsof these seemingly different types of extraterrestrial material are more similar in origin than previously believed. Before, we could only explore minute samples from IDPs. Our discovery now allows us to extract large amounts of this material from meteorites, which are large and contain several percent of carbon, instead of from IDPs, which are on the order of a million million times less massive. This advancement has opened up an entirely new window on studying this elusive period of time, concluded Busemann. Source: Carnegie Institution
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