Loading…

Thermal Processing of Silicate Dust in the Solar Nebula: Clues from Primitive Chondrite Matrices

The most abundant matrix minerals in chondritic meteorites--hydrated phyllosilicates and ferrous olivine crystals--formed predominantly in asteroids during fluid-assisted metamorphism. We infer that they formed from minerals present in three less altered carbonaceous chondrites that have silicate ma...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Astrophysical journal 2005-04, Vol.623 (1), p.571-578
Main Authors: Scott, Edward R. D, Krot, Alexander N
Format: Article
Language:English
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:The most abundant matrix minerals in chondritic meteorites--hydrated phyllosilicates and ferrous olivine crystals--formed predominantly in asteroids during fluid-assisted metamorphism. We infer that they formed from minerals present in three less altered carbonaceous chondrites that have silicate matrices composed largely of micrometer- and nanometer-sized grains of crystalline forsterite Mg sub(2)SiO sub(4) and enstatite MgSiO sub(3) and amorphous, ferromagnesian silicate. Compositional and structural features of enstatite and forsterite suggest that they formed as condensates that cooled below 1300 K at similar to 1000 K hr super(-1). Most amorphous silicates are likely to be solar nebula condensates also, as matrix, which is approximately solar in composition, is unlikely to be a mixture of genetically unrelated materials with different compositions. Since chondrules cooled at 10-1000 K hr super(-1) and matrix and chondrules are chemically complementary, most matrix silicates probably formed close to chondrules in transient heating events. Shock heating is favored, as nebular shocks capable of melting millimeter-sized aggregates vaporize dust. The crystalline and amorphous silicates in the primitive chondrite matrices share many characteristic features with silicates in chondritic interplanetary dust particles, suggesting that most of the crystalline silicates and possibly some amorphous silicates in the interplanetary dust particles are also nebular condensates. Except for small amounts of refractory oxides from the innermost region where refractory inclusions formed and presolar dust, most of the crystalline silicate dust that accreted into chondritic asteroids and long-period comets appears to have formed from shock heating at similar to 2-10 AU. Forsterite crystals around young stars may have a similar origin.
ISSN:0004-637X
1538-4357
DOI:10.1086/428606