What Compounds Do Micrometeorites Contribute to the Atmospheres of Habitable Planets? Monika Kress, Don Brownlee Center for Astrobiology and Early Evolution & Department of Astronomy University of Washington (Seattle) George Cody Carnegie Institution of Washington 12 February 2003
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What Compounds Do Micrometeorites Contribute to the Atmospheres of Habitable Planets?
What Compounds Do Micrometeorites Contribute to the Atmospheres of Habitable Planets?. Monika Kress, Don Brownlee Center for Astrobiology and Early Evolution & Department of Astronomy University of Washington (Seattle) George Cody Carnegie Institution of Washington. 12 February 2003. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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What Compounds Do Micrometeorites Contribute to the Atmospheres of Habitable Planets?
Monika Kress, Don BrownleeCenter for Astrobiology and Early Evolution
&Department of Astronomy
University of Washington (Seattle)
George CodyCarnegie Institution of Washington
12 February 2003.
30,000,000 kg (30,000 tons) of meteorites fall to Earth every year
mountaindust sand rock bouldersmoke
increasing particle size
0.1 mm
shooting stars fireballs
Anders 1989
Exogenous influx at 4 Ga would have been >> than today because:
Most stars have debris disks for 300 Myr
timescale ~Late heavy bombardment
Flux ~ 106 x today
Beuzit et al, ESO/Obs. Grenoble
-Pictoris
(c) Tezel 2001
Micrometeorites are very strongly heated as they enter the atmosphere
What happens to the carbon in these strongly-heated micrometeorites?
~100 m in diameter; olivine, magnetite, glass... metal sulfide
Don Brownlee
unmelted~10m50%wt C
O
OH2
O
CH3O
O
CH3
Macromolecular structure of organic component of Murchison(proxy for micrometeorites before atmospheric entry)
G. Cody (GCA 2002)
Carbonaceous chondrite~5%wt C~10%wt H2O
Experiment: Simulate atmospheric entry
1. Grind up bulk Murchison matrix into ~300 m particles
2. Flash-heat in pyroprobe: 500 K/sec to ~900-1000 K
3. Volatile products analyzed with GC
Products released during Murchison flash-heating experiments
Major products: • CO, CO2, H2O (as expected)
• CH4, SO2 and H2S (interesting!)
Other products (cool!):• Hydrocarbons • Numerous functionalized polycyclics (PAHs)• Various heterocycles