4.7 Article

ENANTIOMERIC EXCESSES INDUCED IN AMINO ACIDS BY ULTRAVIOLET CIRCULARLY POLARIZED LIGHT IRRADIATION OF EXTRATERRESTRIAL ICE ANALOGS: A POSSIBLE SOURCE OF ASYMMETRY FOR PREBIOTIC CHEMISTRY

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 788, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/788/1/79

Keywords

astrobiology; astrochemistry; meteorites, meteors, meteoroids; methods : laboratory : solid state polarization; ultraviolet : general

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The discovery of meteoritic amino acids with enantiomeric excesses of the L-form (ee(L)) has suggested that extraterrestrial organic materials may have contributed to prebiotic chemistry and directed the initial occurrence of the eeL that further led to homochirality of amino acids on Earth. A proposed mechanism for the origin of eeL in meteorites involves an asymmetric photochemistry of extraterrestrial ices by UV circularly polarized light (CPL). We have performed the asymmetric synthesis of amino acids on achiral extraterrestrial ice analogs by VUV CPL, investigating the chiral asymmetry transfer at two different evolutionary stages at which the analogs were irradiated (regular ices and/or organic residues) and at two different photon energies (6.6 and 10.2 eV). We identify 16 distinct amino acids and precisely measure the L-enantiomeric excesses using the enantioselective GC x GC-TOFMS technique in five of them: alpha-alanine, 2,3-diaminopropionic acid, 2-aminobutyric acid, valine, and norvaline, with values ranging from eeL = -0.20% +/- 0.14% to ee(L) = -2.54% +/- 0.28%. The sign of the induced eeL depends on the helicity and the energy of CPL, but not on the evolutionary stage of the samples, and is the same for all five considered amino acids. Our results support an astrophysical scenario in which the solar system was formed in a high-mass star-forming region where icy grains were irradiated during the protoplanetary phase by an external source of CPL of a given helicity and a dominant energy, inducing a stereo-specific photochemistry.

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