Impact jetting as the origin of chondrules

被引:145
作者
Johnson, Brandon C. [1 ]
Minton, David A. [2 ]
Melosh, H. J. [2 ]
Zuber, Maria T. [1 ]
机构
[1] MIT, Dept Earth Atmospher & Planetary Sci, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
[2] Purdue Univ, Dept Earth Atmospher & Planetary Sci, W Lafayette, IN 47907 USA
关键词
EARLY SOLAR-SYSTEM; RELATIVE VELOCITIES; PROTOPLANETARY DISK; CHONDRITES; PLANETESIMALS; ACCRETION; SIMULATIONS; CONSTRAINTS; PARTICLES; MODEL;
D O I
10.1038/nature14105
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Chondrules are the millimetre-scale, previously molten, spherules found in most meteorites(1). Before chondrules formed, large differentiating planetesimals had already accreted(2). Volatile-rich olivine reveals that chondrules formed inextremely solid-rich environments, more like impact plumes than the solar nebula(3-5). The unique chondrules in CB chondrites probably formed in a vapour-melt plume produced by a hypervelocity impact(6) with an impact velocity greater than 10 kilometres per second. An acceptable formation model for the overwhelming majority of chondrules, however, has not been established. Here we report that impacts can produce enough chondrules during the first five million years of planetary accretion to explain their observed abundance. Building on a previous study of impact jetting(7), we simulate protoplanetary impacts, finding that material is melted and ejected at high speed when the impact velocity exceeds 2.5 kilometres per second. Using a Monte Carlo accretion code, we estimate the location, timing, sizes, and velocities of chondrule-formingimpacts. Ejecta size estimates(8) indicate that jetted melt will form millimetre-scale droplets. Our radiative transfermodels show that these droplets experience the expected cooling rates of ten to a thousand kelvin per hour(9,10). An impact origin for chondrules implies that meteorites are a byproduct of planet formation rather than leftover building material.
引用
收藏
页码:339 / U421
页数:11
相关论文
共 47 条
[1]   COLLISION RATES OF SMALL PARTICLES IN A VIGOROUSLY TURBULENT FLUID [J].
ABRAHAMSON, J .
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SCIENCE, 1975, 30 (11) :1371-1379
[2]   The formation conditions of chondrules and chondrites [J].
Alexander, C. M. O'D. ;
Grossman, J. N. ;
Ebel, D. S. ;
Ciesla, F. J. .
SCIENCE, 2008, 320 (5883) :1617-1619
[3]   Questions, questions: Can the contradictions between the petrologic, isotopic, thermodynamic, and astrophysical constraints on chondrule formation be resolved? [J].
Alexander, Conel M. O'D ;
Ebel, Denton S. .
METEORITICS & PLANETARY SCIENCE, 2012, 47 (07) :1157-1175
[4]  
[Anonymous], LPI C OR MOON
[5]   Chondrule formation during planetesimal accretion [J].
Asphaug, Erik ;
Jutzi, Martin ;
Movshovitz, Naor .
EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 2011, 308 (3-4) :369-379
[6]   THE ORIGIN OF THE MOON AND THE SINGLE-IMPACT HYPOTHESIS .3. [J].
BENZ, W ;
CAMERON, AGW ;
MELOSH, HJ .
ICARUS, 1989, 81 (01) :113-131
[7]   Volatile fractionation in the early solar system and chondrule/matrix complementarity [J].
Bland, PA ;
Alard, O ;
Benedix, GK ;
Kearsley, AT ;
Menzies, ON ;
Watt, LE ;
Rogers, NW .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2005, 102 (39) :13755-13760
[8]  
Bowling T. J., 2013, J GEOPHYS RES PLANET
[9]   Chondrule collisions in shock waves [J].
Ciesla, Fred J. .
METEORITICS & PLANETARY SCIENCE, 2006, 41 (09) :1347-1359
[10]   Improvements to the ε-α porous compaction model for simulating impacts into high-porosity solar system objects [J].
Collins, G. S. ;
Melosh, H. J. ;
Wuennemann, K. .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF IMPACT ENGINEERING, 2011, 38 (06) :434-439