4.7 Article

Evidence for Asteroid Scattering and Distal Solar System Solids From Meteorite Paleomagnetism

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 892, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ab7cd4

Keywords

Meteorites; Magnetic fields; Primordial magnetic fields; Asteroid belt; Asteroids; Kuiper Belt; Protoplanetary disks; Chondrites; Chondrules; Carbonaceous chondrites

Funding

  1. St. John's College, University of Cambridge
  2. NASA Emerging Worlds program [NNX15AH72G]
  3. U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [DE-AC52-07NA27344]
  4. Laboratory Directed Research and Development [17-ERD-001]

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Asteroid-sized bodies are predicted to have been scattered throughout the solar system following gravitational interactions with the giant planets. This process could have delivered water-rich small bodies to the inner solar system. However, evidence from the meteorite record supporting this scattering is limited due to difficulties in recovering the formation distance of meteorite parent bodies from laboratory measurements. Moreover, ancient millimeter-sized solids that formed in the inner solar system (calcium-aluminum-rich inclusions (CAIs) and chondrules) have also been proposed to have migrated throughout the solar system, which could have been key to their survival. Our understanding of the driving mechanisms, distances, and timings involved in this motion is also restricted for the same reasons. Here, we address these limitations by recovering the formation distance of the parent asteroid of the Tagish Lake meteorite from measurements of its natural remanent magnetization. We find that this meteorite experienced an ancient field intensity mu T. Accounting for the average effect of a tilted parent body rotation axis and possible uncertainties associated with the remanence acquisition mechanism, this result argues that the Tagish Lake parent body formed at >8-13 au, suggesting this body originates from the distal solar system. Tagish Lake came to Earth from the asteroid belt which, combined with our recovered formation distance, suggests that some small bodies traveled large distances throughout the solar system. Moreover, Tagish Lake contains CAIs and chondrules, indicating that these solids were capable of traveling to the distal solar system within just a few million years.

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