http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=16538

PRESS RELEASE
Date Released: Saturday, April 2, 2005
Source: NASA Astrobiology Institute

Using Isotopes to Probe the Earliest History of the Solar Nebula 

By: David Morrison, NAI Senior Scientist 

Members of the NAI UCLA team led by Ed Young are using high-precision analysis 
of tiny grains in
meteorites to probe the earliest history of the solar nebula. The age of the 
solar system is set at
4.567 billion years, and the new work traces some of the history of these small 
grains during about
300,000 years, before the formation of comets, asteroids, or planets. All the 
solid objects in the
solar system formed within a circumstellar protoplanetary disk called the solar 
nebula. Among the
oldest materials are tiny calcium- and aluminum-rich grains or inclusions 
(called CAIs) found in
some meteorites. The earliest history of these grains can be probed by studying 
their magnesium
isotopes, since part of this magnesium was produced by the rapid radioactive 
decay of aluminum-26,
an isotope with a half-life of less than a million years. Somewhat ironically, 
we have better
time-resolution on these earliest events than for most of the later history of 
the planetary system.

A recent paper by Ed Young and other members of the UCLA NAI team, done in 
collaboration with
colleagues in England, examines this early history of CAIs. The absolute ages 
of these oldest
grains, determined by the decay of uranium into lead, is 4567 million years 
(4.567 billion years),
which is usually defined to be the age of the solar system. Part of the new 
high-precision analysis
of meteorites reported in this paper leads to a re-evaluation upward of the 
amount of aluminum-26
present when the solar system formed. Knowing this initial quantity of 
radioactive aluminum allows
scientists to make better use of the aluminum-decay "clock" to understand 
events at the time dust
was condensing in the early solar nebula. 

This new work looks at the history of the CAIs as revealed by the balance 
between aluminum and
magnesium, which can be altered by heating. They conclude that over about 
300,000 years temperatures
were high enough for transfers to take place between the minerals melilite and 
anorthite. However,
these temperatures cannot have been elevated for that entire time. Rather, the 
grains must have
experienced many episodes of heating and cooling. 

Two mechanisms are suggested for this episodic heating. One possibility is that 
the orbits of these
millimeter-sized grains within the solar nebula brought them very close to 
proto-sun perhaps as many
as 15 times, where temperatures up to 1600 K persisting for 10-20 years would 
have caused partial
melting of the grains. To achieve such high temperatures, the grains would have 
needed to come much
closer to the young Sun than the present orbit of Mercury. Alternatively, part 
of the grain heating
could have come about from shock waves generated by turbulence in the 
protoplanetary disk. 

Studies like this, based on analysis of meteorites, can tell us something about 
the conditions in
the solar nebula before the planets, or even the comets and asteroids, were 
formed. These data can
also be compared with remote sensing of circumstellar disks seen today, where 
other planetary
systems are being born in our Galaxy. 

The paper by Young et al., titled ?Supra-Canonical Al-26/Al-27 and the 
Residence Time of CAIs in the
Solar Protoplanetary Disk, was published on-line in Science Express for March 
3, 2005. 
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