論文

2019年4月11日

Hypervelocity collision and water-rock interaction in space preserved in the Chelyabinsk ordinary chondrite

PROCEEDINGS OF THE JAPAN ACADEMY SERIES B-PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
  • Eizo Nakamura
  • Tak Kunihiro
  • Tsutomu Ota
  • Chie Sakaguchi
  • Ryoji Tanaka
  • Hiroshi Kitagawa
  • Katsura Kobayashi
  • Masahiro Yamanaka
  • Yuri Shimaki
  • Gray E. Bebout
  • Hitoshi Miura
  • Tetsuo Yamamoto
  • Vladimir Malkovets
  • Victor Grokhovsky
  • Olga Koroleva
  • Konstantin Litasov
  • 全て表示

95
4
開始ページ
165
終了ページ
177
記述言語
英語
掲載種別
研究論文(学術雑誌)
DOI
10.2183/pjab.95.013
出版者・発行元
JAPAN ACAD

A comprehensive geochemical study of the Chelyabinsk meteorite reveals further details regarding its history of impact-related fragmentation and melting, and later aqueous alteration, during its transit toward Earth. We support an similar to 30 Ma age obtained by Ar-Ar method (Beard et al., 2014) for the impact-related melting, based on Rb-Sr isotope analyses of a melt domain. An irregularly shaped olivine with a distinct 0 isotope composition in a melt domain appears to be a fragment of a silicate-rich impactor. Hydrogen and Li concentrations and isotopic compositions, textures of Fe oxyhydroxides, and the presence of organic materials located in fractures, are together consistent with aqueous alteration, and this alteration could have pre-dated interaction with the Earth's atmosphere. As one model, we suggest that hypervelocity capture of the impact-related debris by a comet nucleus could have led to shock-wave-induced supercritical aqueous fluids dissolving the silicate, metallic, and organic matter, with later ice sublimation yielding a rocky rubble pile sampled by the meteorite.

リンク情報
DOI
https://doi.org/10.2183/pjab.95.013
Web of Science
https://gateway.webofknowledge.com/gateway/Gateway.cgi?GWVersion=2&SrcAuth=JSTA_CEL&SrcApp=J_Gate_JST&DestLinkType=FullRecord&KeyUT=WOS:000470804000002&DestApp=WOS_CPL
URL
https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/pjab/95/4/95_PJA9504B-02/_pdf
ID情報
  • DOI : 10.2183/pjab.95.013
  • ISSN : 0386-2208
  • eISSN : 1349-2896
  • Web of Science ID : WOS:000470804000002

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