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1.
Spectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc ; 228: 117819, 2020 Mar 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31806480

ABSTRACT

The meteorite Sariçiçek, a 2015 howardite fall in Turkey, was analyzed using various physical techniques. Both the interior and the fusion crust were studied by optical and scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersive spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, magnetization measurements and Mössbauer spectroscopy. The main and minor iron-bearing phases such as orthopyroxene, Ca-poor and Ca-rich clinopyroxene, chromite with hercynite, Fe2+ and Fe3+ ilmenite, troilite, α-Fe(Ni, Co), α2-Fe(Ni, Co) and γ-Fe(Ni, Co) phases were identified. The ratios of Fe2+ occupancies in the M1 and M2 sites in the silicate phases as well as the equilibrium Fe2+ and Mg2+ cations distribution temperatures (Teq) for orthopyroxene were estimated using X-ray diffraction and Mössbauer spectroscopy, which appeared to be in a good agreement: for example, Teq were 886 and 878 K, respectively. The glass-like fusion crust of Sariçiçek consists of orthopyroxene with ferrous and ferric compounds that are likely products of combustion and melting.

2.
Science ; 366(6470)2019 12 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31806784

ABSTRACT

Active asteroids are those that show evidence of ongoing mass loss. We report repeated instances of particle ejection from the surface of (101955) Bennu, demonstrating that it is an active asteroid. The ejection events were imaged by the OSIRIS-REx (Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, and Security-Regolith Explorer) spacecraft. For the three largest observed events, we estimated the ejected particle velocities and sizes, event times, source regions, and energies. We also determined the trajectories and photometric properties of several gravitationally bound particles that orbited temporarily in the Bennu environment. We consider multiple hypotheses for the mechanisms that lead to particle ejection for the largest events, including rotational disruption, electrostatic lofting, ice sublimation, phyllosilicate dehydration, meteoroid impacts, thermal stress fracturing, and secondary impacts.

3.
Spectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc ; 219: 206-224, 2019 Aug 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31048250

ABSTRACT

The meter-scale variations of material properties of the 20-m sized Chelyabinsk meteoroid are critical for understanding why the meteoroid fragmented the way it did and caused the devastating airburst that sent over 1600 people to the hospital for treatment of glass cuts and minor injuries on February 15, 2013. From a range of differently looking unweathered meteorite fragments that were recovered shortly after the event, these material differences were probed by means of optical and scanning electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction (XRD), and the high velocity resolution Mössbauer spectroscopy. All main and some minor iron-bearing phases were identified on the basis of XRD data and Mössbauer spectra. The Fe2+ partitioning between the M1 and M2 sites in silicate phases was determined independently using XRD and Mössbauer data. Different meteorite fragments show a range of 570-1180 K in the temperature of the Fe2+ and Mg2+ equilibrium distribution between the M1 and M2 sites in olivine, while that in orthopyroxene falls in the range 870-1180 K (these ranges were estimated using both techniques). This fact points out a slightly different thermal history of these minerals before they accumulated in different parts of the Chelyabinsk meteoroid. The Chelyabinsk meteoroid is a fragmental breccia from materials formed at different depths in their parent body, or from materials that experienced different annealing temperatures in impacts. In addition, the fusion crust from two fragments, studied by XRD and Mössbauer spectroscopy, experienced a different thermal history during entry, suggesting that the fragment with mixed light and dark lithologies was located deeper inside the initial meteoroid than the fragment with only light lithology, or fragmented less readily.

4.
Nature ; 458(7237): 485-8, 2009 Mar 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19325630

ABSTRACT

In the absence of a firm link between individual meteorites and their asteroidal parent bodies, asteroids are typically characterized only by their light reflection properties, and grouped accordingly into classes. On 6 October 2008, a small asteroid was discovered with a flat reflectance spectrum in the 554-995 nm wavelength range, and designated 2008 TC(3) (refs 4-6). It subsequently hit the Earth. Because it exploded at 37 km altitude, no macroscopic fragments were expected to survive. Here we report that a dedicated search along the approach trajectory recovered 47 meteorites, fragments of a single body named Almahata Sitta, with a total mass of 3.95 kg. Analysis of one of these meteorites shows it to be an achondrite, a polymict ureilite, anomalous in its class: ultra-fine-grained and porous, with large carbonaceous grains. The combined asteroid and meteorite reflectance spectra identify the asteroid as F class, now firmly linked to dark carbon-rich anomalous ureilites, a material so fragile it was not previously represented in meteorite collections.

5.
Sci Am ; 285(2): 44-7, 50-1, 2001 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11478001
6.
J Chem Phys ; 107(4): 1232-41, 1997 Jul 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11542399

ABSTRACT

Vapor-deposited amorphous water ice when warmed above the glass transition temperature (120-140 K), is a viscous liquid which exhibits a viscosity vs temperature relationship different from that of liquid water at room temperature. New studies of thin water ice films now demonstrate that viscous liquid water persists in the temperature range 140-210 K. where it coexists with cubic crystalline ice. The liquid character of amorphous water above the glass transition is demonstrated by (1) changes in the morphology of water ice films on a nonwetting surface observed in transmission electron microscopy (TEM) at around 175 K during slow warming, (2) changes in the binding energy of water molecules measured in temperature programmed desorption (TPD) studies, and (3) changes in the shape of the 3.07 micrometers absorption band observed in grazing angle reflection-absorption infrared spectroscopy (RAIRS) during annealing at high temperature. whereby the decreased roughness of the water surface is thought to cause changes in the selection rules for the excitation of O-H stretch vibrations. Because it is present over such a wide range of temperatures, we propose that this form of liquid water is a common material in nature. where it is expected to exist in the subsurface layers of comets and on the surfaces of some planets and satellites.


Subject(s)
Ice/analysis , Temperature , Water/chemistry , Astronomical Phenomena , Astronomy , Crystallization , Exobiology , Meteoroids , Microscopy, Electron , Spectrophotometry, Infrared , Viscosity , Water/analysis
7.
Astrophys J ; 473(2 Pt 1): 1104-13, 1996 Dec 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11539415

ABSTRACT

Electron diffraction studies of vapor-deposited water ice have characterized the dynamical structural changes during crystallization that affect volatile retention in cometary materials. Crystallization is found to occur by nucleation of small domains, while leaving a significant part of the amorphous material in a slightly more relaxed amorphous state that coexists metastably with cubic crystalline ice. The onset of the amorphous relaxation is prior to crystallization and coincides with the glass transition. Above the glass transition temperature, the crystallization kinetics are consistent with the amorphous solid becoming a "strong" viscous liquid. The amorphous component can effectively retain volatiles during crystallization if the volatile concentration is approximately 10% or less. For higher initial impurity concentrations, a significant amount of impurities is released during crystallization, probably because the impurities are trapped on the surfaces of micropores. A model for crystallization over long timescales is described that can be applied to a wide range of impure water ices under typical astrophysical conditions if the fragility factor D, which describes the viscosity behavior, can be estimated.


Subject(s)
Extraterrestrial Environment , Ice/analysis , Meteoroids , Solar System , Water/chemistry , Astronomical Phenomena , Astronomy , Crystallization , Mathematics , Temperature
8.
Orig Life Evol Biosph ; 25(1-3): 3-19, 1995 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11536679

ABSTRACT

Computer simulations of bulk and vapor deposited amorphous ices are presented. The structure of the bulk low density amorphous ice is in good agreement with experiments on pressure disordered amorphous ice. Both the low density bulk ice and the vapor deposited ices exhibit strong ordering. Vapor deposition of hot (300 K) water molecules onto a cold (77 K) substrate yields less porous ices than deposition of cold (77 K) water molecules onto a cold substrate. Both vapor deposited ices are more porous than the bulk amorphous ice. The structure of bulk high density amorphous ice is only in fair agreement with experimental results. Attempts to simulate high density amorphous ice via vapor deposition were not successful. Electron diffraction results on vapor deposited amorphous ice indicate that the temperature of the nucleation of the cubic phase depends upon the amount of time between the deposition and the onset of crystallization, suggesting that freshly deposited ice layers reconstruct on times of the order of hours. The temperature dependence of the microporosity of the vapor deposited amorphous ices might affect laboratory experiments that are aimed at simulating astrophysical ices in the context of the origin of prebiotic organic material and its transport to the Earth.


Subject(s)
Computer Simulation , Ice/analysis , Meteoroids , Models, Molecular , Densitometry , Evolution, Chemical , Hydrogen/chemistry , Oxygen/chemistry , Porosity , Water/chemistry
9.
Science ; 265: 753-6, 1994 Aug 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11539186

ABSTRACT

Selected area electron diffraction is used to monitor structural changes of vapor-deposited water ice in vacuum during warm-up from 15 to 188 K. A progression of three amorphous forms of water ice is found with well-defined transitions. The formation of a high-density amorphous form (Iah) at 15 K is confirmed, and the transition to the more familiar low-density form (Ial) occurs gradually over the range 38 to 68 K. At 131 K, the ice transforms into a third amorphous form (Iar), which precedes the crystallization of cubic ice (Ic) and coexists metastably with Ic from 148 K until at least 188 K. These structural transformations of amorphous water ice can be used to explain hitherto anomalous properties of astrophysical ices. The structural transition from Iah to Ial is responsible for the diffusion and recombination of radicals in ultraviolet-photolyzed interstellar ices at low temperatures. The occurrence and persistence of Iar explains anomalous gas retention and gas release from water-rich ices at temperatures above 150 K.


Subject(s)
Extraterrestrial Environment , Ice/analysis , Meteoroids , Models, Molecular , Water/chemistry , Algorithms , Astronomy/methods , Crystallization , Temperature
10.
Vaccine ; 11(3): 349-58, 1993.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8383385

ABSTRACT

Control of Marek's disease in the poultry industry has been successfully achieved for several decades by large-scale vaccination of day-old chickens with live herpesvirus of turkeys (HVT) strains. Several features of this virus including lack of pathogenicity and long-term immune protection due to a persistent viraemic infection made us decide to use HVT as a live viral vector for the expression of foreign antigens. Potential sites for the integration of foreign DNA in the unique short region of the HVT genome were identified by the insertion of a beta-galactosidase expression cassette. Vaccination trials with recombinant virus strains indicated that the marker gene was expressed and stably maintained during animal passage. Based on an insertion site mapping in one of the open reading frames of the unique short region, a general recombination vector was designed for the integration of foreign genes into HVT. Recombinant virus-directed expression of individual antigens from Newcastle disease virus was driven by a strong promoter element derived from the lung terminal repeat sequence of Rous sarcoma virus.


Subject(s)
Antigens, Viral/genetics , Herpesviridae/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Base Sequence , Chickens , DNA, Viral/genetics , Gene Expression , Genes, Viral , Genetic Vectors , Herpesviridae/immunology , Herpesvirus 2, Gallid/genetics , Herpesvirus 2, Gallid/immunology , Marek Disease/prevention & control , Molecular Sequence Data , Newcastle disease virus/genetics , Newcastle disease virus/immunology , Turkeys
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