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1.
Geochim Cosmochim Acta ; 316: 1-20, 2022 Jan 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35001943

RESUMO

The chemical and isotopic signatures of moderately volatile elements are useful for understanding processes of volatile depletion in planetary formation and differentiation. However, the fractionation factors between gas and melt phases during evaporation that are required to model these planetary volatile depletion processes are still sparse. In this study, twenty heating experiments were conducted in 1 atm gas-mixing furnaces to constrain the behavior of K, Cu, and Zn evaporation and isotopic fractionation from basaltic melts at high temperatures. The temperatures range from 1300 °C to 1400 °C, and durations are from 2 to 8 days. Oxygen fugacities (fO2) range from one log unit below to ten log units above that of the iron-wüstite buffer (IW-1 to IW+10, corresponding to logfO2 of -10.7 to -0.68 at 1400 °C). The conditions were selected to achieve an evaporation-dominated regime (where timescales of diffusion << evaporation for trace elements) in order to avoid diffusion-limited evaporation. Our results show during evaporation Zn behaved as the most volatile, followed by Cu and then K, regardless of temperature and oxygen fugacity. Partitioning of Zn into spinel layers within experimental capsules, however, has been observed, which has substantial effects on the Zn isotope fractionation factor. Therefore, Zn results are presented but further discussion is excluded. Element loss depends on both temperature and oxygen fugacity, where higher temperatures and lower oxygen fugacities promote evaporation. However, with varying temperature and oxygen fugacity, the kinetic isotopic fractionation factors, α (where, R R 0 = f α - 1 ), for K and Cu remain constant, thus these factors can be applied to a wider range of conditions than those in this study. The experimentally determined fractionation factors for K, and Cu during evaporation from basaltic melts are 0.9944, and 0.9961, respectively. The fractionation factors for these elements with varying volatilities are all significantly larger than the "apparent observed fractionation factors," which approach one and are inferred from lunar basalts relative to the Bulk Silicate Earth. This observation suggests near-equilibrium conditions during volatile-element loss from the Moon as the "apparent observed fractionation factors" of lunar basalts are similar for all three elements.

2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(39)2021 09 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34544856

RESUMO

The abundances of water and highly to moderately volatile elements in planets are considered critical to mantle convection, surface evolution processes, and habitability. From the first flyby space probes to the more recent "Perseverance" and "Tianwen-1" missions, "follow the water," and, more broadly, "volatiles," has been one of the key themes of martian exploration. Ratios of volatiles relative to refractory elements (e.g., K/Th, Rb/Sr) are consistent with a higher volatile content for Mars than for Earth, despite the contrasting present-day surface conditions of those bodies. This study presents K isotope data from a spectrum of martian lithologies as an isotopic tracer for comparing the inventories of highly and moderately volatile elements and compounds of planetary bodies. Here, we show that meteorites from Mars have systematically heavier K isotopic compositions than the bulk silicate Earth, implying a greater loss of K from Mars than from Earth. The average "bulk silicate" δ41K values of Earth, Moon, Mars, and the asteroid 4-Vesta correlate with surface gravity, the Mn/Na "volatility" ratio, and most notably, bulk planet H2O abundance. These relationships indicate that planetary volatile abundances result from variable volatile loss during accretionary growth in which larger mass bodies preferentially retain volatile elements over lower mass objects. There is likely a threshold on the size requirements of rocky (exo)planets to retain enough H2O to enable habitability and plate tectonics, with mass exceeding that of Mars.

3.
Astrophys J ; 8252016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30705444

RESUMO

Presolar grains constitute the remnants of stars that existed before the formation of the solar system. In addition to providing direct information on the materials from which the solar system formed, these grains provide ground-truth information for models of stellar evolution and nucleosynthesis. Here we report the in situ identification of two unique presolar graphite grains from the primitive meteorite LaPaz Icefield 031117. Based on these two graphite grains, we estimate a bulk presolar graphite abundance of 5 - 3 + 7 ppm in this meteorite. One of the grains (LAP-141) is characterized by an enrichment in 12C and depletions in 33,34S, and contains a small iron sulfide subgrain, representing the first unambiguous identification of presolar iron sulfide. The other grain (LAP-149) is extremely 13C-rich and 15N-poor, with one of the lowest 12C/13C ratios observed among presolar grains. Comparison of its isotopic compositions with new stellar nucleosynthesis and dust condensation models indicates an origin in the ejecta of a low-mass CO nova. Grain LAP-149 is the first putative nova grain that quantitatively best matches nova model predictions, providing the first strong evidence for graphite condensation in nova ejecta. Our discovery confirms that CO nova graphite and presolar iron sulfide contributed to the original building blocks of the solar system.

4.
Science ; 303(5656): 323-4, 2004 Jan 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14726581
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