Sounds like a good opinion to me -
Ted Bunch
On 6/21/08 9:48 AM, "Steve Dunklee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Ionized particles in the early formation of chondrules would hold a charge.
> This charge would hold sodium vapor rather than allowing it to be driven away,
> much the way a sodium vapor lamp works. In effect the charge in addition to
> the low gravity would would tend to concentrate the available sodium , which
> would be deposited in the chondrules. You have to remember that most
> chondrules formed before the sun did ,so there was nothing to drive the gasses
> away which could allow higher than expected sodium in chondrules. Once the sun
> ignited any surface gasses would be driven away but any trapped sodium would
> remain.
Higher sodium values do not prove higher concentrations of gasses
> at formation. If they were higher they would permeate the entire structure
> rather than be on the surface of the crystals, much the way salt concentrates
> on the surface of ice crystals in the arctic.
Just my opinion
Steve
> Dunklee
--- On Thu, 6/19/08, Darren Garrison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> From:
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