[meteorite-list] Supernova Shrapnel Found in Meteorite

2010-09-16 Thread MEM
Yet another meteorite related news item.  Check your specimens for chromium 54 
grains and see if you've hit the lottery for pre-pre-solar grains!  They will 
be 
magnetic but at 100 nm not somehting you'll see with the eye alone.
Elton

Supernova Shrapnel Found in Meteorite
ScienceDaily (Sep. 14, 2010) — Scientists have identified the microscopic 
shrapnel of a nearby star  that exploded just before or during the birth of the 
solar system 4.5  billion years ago.

Faint traces of the supernova,  found in a meteorite, account for the 
mysterious 

variations in the  chemical fingerprint of chromium found from one planet and 
meteorite to  another. University of Chicago cosmochemist Nicolas Dauphas and 
eight co-authors report their finding in the late Sept. 10, 2010 issue of the 
Astrophysical Journal.
Scientists formerly believed that chromium 54 and other elements and  their 
isotopic variations became evenly spread throughout the cloud of  gas and dust 
that collapsed to form the solar system. It was a very  well-mixed soup, said 
Bradley Meyer, a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Clemson University  
who was not a co-author of the study. But it looks like some of the  
ingredients got in there and didn't get completely homogenized, and  that's a 
pretty interesting result.
Scientists have known for four decades that a supernova probably  occurred 
approximately 4.5 billion years ago, possibly triggering the  birth of the sun. 
Their evidence: traces of aluminum 26 and iron 60, two  short-lived isotopes 
found in meteorites but not on Earth.
These isotopes could have come from a type II supernova, caused by  the 
core-collapse of a massive star. It seems likely that at least one  massive 
star contributed material to the solar system or what was going  to become the 
solar system shortly before its birth, Meyer said.
Researchers have already extracted many type II supernova grains from 
meteorites, but never from a type IA supernova.  The latter type involves the 
explosion of a small but extremely dense  white-dwarf star in a binary system, 
one in which two stars orbit each  other. It should now be possible to 
determine 

which type of supernova contributed the chromium 54 to the Orgueil meteorite.
The test will be to measure calcium 48, Dauphas said. You can make  it in 
very large quantities in type Ia, but it's very difficult to  produce in type 
II. So if the grains are highly enriched in calcium 48,  they no doubt came 
from a type Ia supernova.
Cosmochemists have sought the carrier of chromium 54 for the last 20  years but 
only recently have instrumentation advances made it possible  to find it. 
Dauphas's own quest began in 2002, when he began the  painstaking meteorite 
sample-preparation process for the analysis he was  finally able to complete 
only last year.
Dauphas and his associates spent three weeks searching for chromium 54-enriched 
nanoparticles with an ion probe at the California Institute of Technology. 
Time 

is very precious on those instruments and getting three weeks of instrument 
time 

is not that easy, he said.
The researchers found a hint of an excess of the chromium-54 isotope  in their 
first session, but as luck would have it, they had to search  1,500 microscopic 
grains of the Orgueil and Murchison meteorites before  finding just one with 
definitely high levels.
The grain measured less than 100 nanometers in diameter -- 1,000  times smaller 
than the diameter of a human hair. This is smaller than  all the other kinds 
of 

presolar grains that have been documented before, except for nanodiamonds that 
have been found here at the University of Chicago, Dauphas said.
The findings suggest that a supernova sprayed a mass of finely  grained 
particles into the cloud of gas and dust that gave birth to the  solar system 
4.5 billion years ago. Dynamical processes in the early  solar system then 
sorted these grains by size. These size-sorting  processes led the grains to 
become disproportionally incorporated into  the meteorites and planets newly 
forming around the sun.
It's remarkable that you can look at an isotope like chromium 54 and  
potentially find out a whole lot about what happened in the very first  period 
of the solar system's formation, Meyer said.
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Re: [meteorite-list] Supernova Shrapnel Found in Meteorite

2010-09-16 Thread Greg Catterton
Very cool info!
Here is a pic of my Orgueil
http://i27.photobucket.com/albums/c165/jedisdiamond/DSCF5360.jpg


Greg Catterton
www.wanderingstarmeteorites.com
IMCA member 4682
On Ebay: http://stores.shop.ebay.com/wanderingstarmeteorites
On Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/WanderingStarMeteorites


--- On Thu, 9/16/10, MEM mstrema...@yahoo.com wrote:

 From: MEM mstrema...@yahoo.com
 Subject: [meteorite-list] Supernova Shrapnel Found in Meteorite
 To: metlist meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Date: Thursday, September 16, 2010, 4:01 AM
 Yet another meteorite related news
 item.  Check your specimens for chromium 54 
 grains and see if you've hit the lottery for pre-pre-solar
 grains!  They will be 
 magnetic but at 100 nm not somehting you'll see with the
 eye alone.
 Elton
 
 Supernova Shrapnel Found in Meteorite
 ScienceDaily (Sep. 14, 2010) — Scientists have identified
 the microscopic 
 shrapnel of a nearby star  that exploded just before
 or during the birth of the 
 solar system 4.5  billion years ago.
 
 Faint traces of the supernova,  found in a meteorite,
 account for the mysterious 
 
 variations in the  chemical fingerprint of chromium
 found from one planet and 
 meteorite to  another. University of Chicago
 cosmochemist Nicolas Dauphas and 
 eight co-authors report their finding in the late Sept. 10,
 2010 issue of the 
 Astrophysical Journal.
 Scientists formerly believed that chromium 54 and other
 elements and  their 
 isotopic variations became evenly spread throughout the
 cloud of  gas and dust 
 that collapsed to form the solar system. It was a
 very  well-mixed soup, said 
 Bradley Meyer, a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at
 Clemson University  
 who was not a co-author of the study. But it looks like
 some of the  
 ingredients got in there and didn't get completely
 homogenized, and  that's a 
 pretty interesting result.
 Scientists have known for four decades that a supernova
 probably  occurred 
 approximately 4.5 billion years ago, possibly triggering
 the  birth of the sun. 
 Their evidence: traces of aluminum 26 and iron 60,
 two  short-lived isotopes 
 found in meteorites but not on Earth.
 These isotopes could have come from a type II supernova,
 caused by  the 
 core-collapse of a massive star. It seems likely that at
 least one  massive 
 star contributed material to the solar system or what was
 going  to become the 
 solar system shortly before its birth, Meyer said.
 Researchers have already extracted many type II supernova
 grains from 
 meteorites, but never from a type IA supernova.  The
 latter type involves the 
 explosion of a small but extremely dense  white-dwarf
 star in a binary system, 
 one in which two stars orbit each  other. It should
 now be possible to determine 
 
 which type of supernova contributed the chromium 54 to the
 Orgueil meteorite.
 The test will be to measure calcium 48, Dauphas said.
 You can make  it in 
 very large quantities in type Ia, but it's very difficult
 to  produce in type 
 II. So if the grains are highly enriched in calcium
 48,  they no doubt came 
 from a type Ia supernova.
 Cosmochemists have sought the carrier of chromium 54 for
 the last 20  years but 
 only recently have instrumentation advances made it
 possible  to find it. 
 Dauphas's own quest began in 2002, when he began the 
 painstaking meteorite 
 sample-preparation process for the analysis he was 
 finally able to complete 
 only last year.
 Dauphas and his associates spent three weeks searching for
 chromium 54-enriched 
 nanoparticles with an ion probe at the California Institute
 of Technology. Time 
 
 is very precious on those instruments and getting three
 weeks of instrument time 
 
 is not that easy, he said.
 The researchers found a hint of an excess of the
 chromium-54 isotope  in their 
 first session, but as luck would have it, they had to
 search  1,500 microscopic 
 grains of the Orgueil and Murchison meteorites before 
 finding just one with 
 definitely high levels.
 The grain measured less than 100 nanometers in diameter --
 1,000  times smaller 
 than the diameter of a human hair. This is smaller
 than  all the other kinds of 
 
 presolar grains that have been documented before, except
 for nanodiamonds that 
 have been found here at the University of Chicago, Dauphas
 said.
 The findings suggest that a supernova sprayed a mass of
 finely  grained 
 particles into the cloud of gas and dust that gave birth to
 the  solar system 
 4.5 billion years ago. Dynamical processes in the
 early  solar system then 
 sorted these grains by size. These size-sorting 
 processes led the grains to 
 become disproportionally incorporated into  the
 meteorites and planets newly 
 forming around the sun.
 It's remarkable that you can look at an isotope like
 chromium 54 and  
 potentially find out a whole lot about what happened in the
 very first  period 
 of the solar system's formation, Meyer said

[meteorite-list] Supernova Shrapnel Found In Meteorite

2010-09-10 Thread Ron Baalke


Media Contact:
Steve Koppes
+1 773-702-8366
skop...@uchicago.edu

Science Contact:
Nicolas Dauphas
+1 773-702-2930
daup...@uchicago.edu

SUPERNOVA SHRAPNEL FOUND IN METEORITE
The University of Chicago
September 9, 2010

Scientists have identified the microscopic shrapnel of a nearby star
that exploded just before or during the birth of the solar system 4.5
billion years ago.

Faint traces of the supernova, found in a meteorite, account for the
mysterious variations in the chemical fingerprint of chromium found
from one planet and meteorite to another. University of Chicago
cosmochemist Nicolas Dauphas and eight co-authors report their 
finding in the Sept. 10, 2010, issue of the Astrophysical
Journal.

Scientists formerly believed that chromium 54 and other elements and
their isotopic variations became evenly spread throughout the cloud of
gas and dust that collapsed to form the solar system. It was a very
well-mixed soup, said Bradley Meyer, a professor of astronomy and
astrophysics at Clemson University who was not a co-author of the
study. But it looks like some of the ingredients got in there and
didn't get completely homogenized, and that's a pretty interesting
result.

Scientists have known for four decades that a supernova probably
occurred approximately 4.5 billion years ago, possibly triggering the
birth of the Sun. Their evidence: traces of aluminum 26 and iron 60,
two short-lived isotopes found in meteorites but not on Earth.

These isotopes could have come from a Type II supernova, caused by the
core-collapse of a massive star. It seems likely that at least one
massive star contributed material to the solar system or what was
going to become the solar systtem shortly before its birth, Meyer 
said.

Researchers have already extracted many Type II supernova grains from
meteorites, but never from a Type Ia supernova. The latter type
involves the explosion of a small but extremely dense white-dwarf star
in a binary system, one in which two stars orbit each other. It should
now be possible to determine which type of supernova contributed the
chromium 54 to the Orgueil meteorite.

The test will be to measure calcium 48, Dauphas said. You can make
it in very large quantities in Type Ia, but it's very difficult to
produce in Type II. So if the grains are highly enriched in calcium
48, they no doubt came from a Type Ia supernova.

Cosmochemists have sought the carrier of chromium 54 for the last 20
years but only recently have instrumentation advances made it possible
to find it. Dauphas's own quest began in 2002, when he began the
painstaking meteorite sample-preparation process for the analysis he
was finally able to complete only last year.

Dauphas and his associates spent three weeks searching for chromium
54-enriched nanoparticles with an ion probe at the California
Institute of Technology. Time is very precious on those instruments,
and getting three weeks of instrument time is not that easy, he said.

The researchers found a hint of an excess of the chromium-54 isotope
in their first session, but as luck would have it, they had to search
1,500 microscopic grains of the Orgueil and Murchison meteorites
before finding just one with definitely high levels.

The grain measured less than 100 nanometers in diameter -- 1,000 times
smaller than the diameter of a human hair. This is smaller than all
the other kinds of presolar grains that have been documented before,
except for nanodiamonds that have been found here at the University of
Chicago, Dauphas said.

The findings suggest that a supernova sprayed a mass of finely grained
particles into the cloud of gas and dust that gave birth to the solar
system 4.5 billion years ago. Dynamical processes in the early sol
system then sorted these grains by size. These size-sorting processes
led the grains to become disproportionally incorporated into the
meteorites and planets newly forming around the Sun.

It's remarkable that you can look at an isotope like chromium 54 and
potentially find out a whole lot about what happened in the very first
period of the solar system's formation, Meyer said.

   # # #

Citation:
Neutron-rich chromium isotope anomalies in supernova nanoparticles,
Sept. 10, 2010, Astrophysical Journal, by Nicolas Dauphas, Laurent
Remusat, James Chen, Mathieu Roskosz, Dimitri Papanastassiou, Julien
Stodolna, Yunbin Guan, Chi Ma, and John Eiler.

Funding:
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and National
Science Foundation (NSF).


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