Using chemical and petrologic evidence and modeling, we deduce that two chondrule-like particles named Iris and Callie, from Stardust cometary track C2052,12,74, formed in an environment very similar to that seen for type II chondrules in meteorites. Iris was heated near liquidus, equilibrated, and cooled at ≤ 100 °C/hr and within ≈ 2 log units of the IW buffer with a high partial pressure of Na such as would be present with dust enrichments of ≈ 10. There was no detectable metamorphic, nebular or aqueous alteration. In previous work Ogliore et al. (2012) reported that Iris formed late, > 3 Myr after CAIs, assuming Al was homogenously distributed, and was rich in heavy oxygen. Iris may be similar to assemblages found only in interplanetary dust particles and Stardust cometary samples called Kool particles. Callie is chemically and isotopically very similar but not identical to Iris.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/maps.12445 | DOI Listing |
Adv Genet
June 2021
Centre for Astrobiology, University of Ruhuna, Matara, Sri Lanka; C.Y.O'Connor ERADE Village Foundation, Piara Waters, Perth, WA, Australia; Melville Analytics Pty Ltd, Melbourne, VIC, Australia. Electronic address:
A range of astronomical observations are shown to be in accord with the theory of cometary panspermia. This theory posits that comets harbor a viable biological component in the form of bacteria and viruses that led to origin and evolution of life on Earth. The data includes (1) infrared, visual and ultraviolet spectra of interstellar dust, (2) infrared spectra of the dust released from comet Halley in 1986, (3) infrared spectra of comet Hale-Bopp in 1997, (4) near and mid-infrared spectra of comet Tempel I in 2005, (5) the discovery of an amino acid and degradation products attributable to biology in the material recovered from the Stardust Mission in 2009, (6) jets from comet Lovejoy showing both a sugar and Ethyl alcohol and finally, (7) a diverse set of data that has emerged from the Rosetta mission.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpace Sci Rev
July 2020
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, 8800 Greenbelt Rd., Greenbelt, 20771 MD USA.
Primitive objects like comets hold important information on the material that formed our solar system. Several comets have been visited by spacecraft and many more have been observed through Earth- and space-based telescopes. Still our understanding remains limited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMeteorit Planet Sci
January 2019
Hawai'i Institute of Geophysics and Planetology, University of Hawai'i at Mānoa, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA.
Comet 81P/Wild 2 dust, the first comet sample of known provenance, was widely expected to resemble anhydrous chondritic porous (CP) interplanetary dust particles (IDPs). GEMS, distinctly characteristic of CP IDPs, have yet to be unambiguously identified in the Stardust mission samples despite claims of likely candidates. One such candidate is Stardust impact track 57 "Febo" in aerogel, which contains fine-grained objects texturally and compositionally similar to GEMS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpace Sci Rev
March 2018
Space Sciences Laboratory, U.C. Berkeley, Berkeley, California 94720-7450 USA.
This review presents our understanding of cometary dust at the end of 2017. For decades, insight about the dust ejected by nuclei of comets had stemmed from remote observations from Earth or Earth's orbit, and from flybys, including the samples of dust returned to Earth for laboratory studies by the Stardust return capsule. The long-duration Rosetta mission has recently provided a huge and unique amount of data, obtained using numerous instruments, including innovative dust instruments, over a wide range of distances from the Sun and from the nucleus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhilos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci
July 2017
NASA Johnson Space Center, ARES, X12 2010 NASA Parkway, Houston, TX 77058-3607, USA.
Comet dust is primitive and shows significant diversity. Our knowledge of the properties of primitive cometary particles has expanded significantly through microscale investigations of cosmic dust samples (anhydrous interplanetary dust particles (IDPs), chondritic porous (CP) IDPs and UltraCarbonaceous Antarctic micrometeorites, and ), as well as through remote sensing ( IR spectroscopy). Comet dust are aggregate particles of materials unequilibrated at submicrometre scales.
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