4.7 Article

MULTIPLE AND FAST: THE ACCRETION OF ORDINARY CHONDRITE PARENT BODIES

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 791, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/791/2/120

Keywords

meteorites, meteors, meteoroids; methods: data analysis; methods: laboratory: solid state; methods: observational; minor planets, asteroids: general; techniques: spectroscopic

Funding

  1. European Community's Seventh Framework Programme
  2. National Science Foundation
  3. Division Of Astronomical Sciences
  4. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [0907766] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Although petrologic, chemical, and isotopic studies of ordinary chondrites and meteorites in general have largely helped establish a chronology of the earliest events of planetesimal formation and their evolution, there are several questions that cannot be resolved via laboratory measurements and/or experiments alone. Here, we propose the rationale for several new constraints on the formation and evolution of ordinary chondrite parent bodies (and, by extension, most planetesimals) from newly available spectral measurements and mineralogical analysis of main-belt S-type asteroids (83 objects) and unequilibrated ordinary chondrite meteorites (53 samples). Based on the latter, we suggest that spectral data may be used to distinguish whether an ordinary chondrite was formed near the surface or in the interior of its parent body. If these constraints are correct, the suggested implications include that: (1) large groups of compositionally similar asteroids are a natural outcome of planetesimal formation and, consequently, meteorites within a given class can originate from multiple parent bodies; (2) the surfaces of large (up to similar to 200 km) S-type main-belt asteroids mostly expose the interiors of the primordial bodies, a likely consequence of impacts by small asteroids (D < 10 km) in the early solar system; (3) the duration of accretion of the H chondrite parent bodies was likely short (instantaneous or in less than similar to 10(5) yr, but certainly not as long as 1 Myr); (4) LL-like bodies formed closer to the Sun than H-like bodies, a possible consequence of the radial mixing and size sorting of chondrules in the protoplanetary disk prior to accretion.

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