Sodium is volatile. It easily burns and boils and diffuses. Meteorites are hardy, and the type known as chondrites are also primitive, dating back to the very early solar system. Chondrites contain a high density of so-called chondrules—roughly millimeter-sized spheres like the one shown here in polarized light—that were flash-melted at temperatures around 2000 K and subsequently cooled and incorporated into a meteorite’s parent object, typically an asteroid. The heating mechanism is unknown but could involve shocks or lightning. Mostly made of silicate minerals such as olivine and pyroxene and of the metals iron and nickel, chondrules are expected to be deficient in volatile elements like sodium. But researchers at the Carnegie Institution of Washington, the US Geological Survey, and the American Museum of Natural History say it isn’t so. Using electron microprobe spectroscopy, they studied 26 chondrules from the Semarkona meteorite that fell in India in 1940 and found...
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1 July 2008
July 01 2008
New chemical clues to Earth-like planet formation
Stephen G. Benka
Physics Today 61 (7), 16 (2008);
Citation
Stephen G. Benka; New chemical clues to Earth-like planet formation. Physics Today 1 July 2008; 61 (7): 16. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2962998
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