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Origin of hydrogen isotopic variations in chondritic water and organics

Authors :
Piani, Laurette
Marrocchi, Yves
Vacher, Lionel G.
Yurimoto, Hisayoshi
Bizzarro, Martin
Source :
Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 567, 1 August 2021, 117008
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Chondrites are rocky fragments of asteroids that formed at different times and heliocentric distances in the early solar system. Most chondrite groups contain water-bearing minerals, attesting that both water-ice and dust were accreted on their parent asteroids. Nonetheless, the hydrogen isotopic composition (D/H) of water in the different chondrite groups remains poorly constrained, due to the intimate mixture of hydrated minerals and organic compounds, the other main H-bearing phase in chondrites. Building on our recent works using in situ secondary ion mass spectrometry analyses, we determined the H isotopic composition of water in a large set of chondritic samples (CI, CM, CO, CR, and C-ungrouped carbonaceous chondrites) and report that water in each group shows a distinct and unique D/H signature. Based on a comparison with literature data on bulk chondrites and their water and organics, our data do not support a preponderant role of parent-body processes in controlling the D/H variations among chondrites. Instead, we propose that the water and organic D/H signatures were mostly shaped by interactions between the protoplanetary disk and the molecular cloud that episodically fed the disk over several million years. Because the preservation of D-rich interstellar water and/or organics in chondritic materials is only possible below their respective sublimation temperatures (160 and 350-450 K), the H isotopic signatures of chondritic materials depend on both the timing and location at which their parent body formed.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 567, 1 August 2021, 117008
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2105.10814
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2021.117008