• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: PARTITIONING TUNGSTEN BETWEEN MATRIX PRECURSORS AND CHONDRULE PRECURSORS THROUGH RELATIVE SETTLING
  • Contributor: Hubbard, Alexander
  • imprint: American Astronomical Society, 2016
  • Published in: The Astrophysical Journal
  • Language: Not determined
  • DOI: 10.3847/0004-637x/826/2/151
  • ISSN: 0004-637X; 1538-4357
  • Keywords: Space and Planetary Science ; Astronomy and Astrophysics
  • Origination:
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  • Description: <jats:title>ABSTRACT</jats:title> <jats:p>Recent studies of chondrites have found a tungsten isotopic anomaly between chondrules and matrix. Given the refractory nature of tungsten, this implies that W was carried into the solar nebula by at least two distinct families of pre-solar grains. The observed chondrule/matrix split requires that the distinct families were kept separate during the dust coagulation process, and that the two families of grain interacted with the chondrule formation mechanism differently. We take the co-existence of different families of solids in the same general orbital region at the chondrule-precursor size as given, and explore the requirements for them to have interacted with the chondrule formation process at significantly different rates. We show that this sorting of families of solids into chondrule- and matrix-destined dust had to have been at least as powerful a sorting mechanism as the relative settling of aerodynamically distinct grains at least two scale heights above the midplane. The requirement that the chondrule formation mechanism was correlated in some fashion with a dust-grain sorting mechanism argues strongly for spatially localized chondrule formation mechanisms such as turbulent dissipation in non-thermally ionized disk surface layers, and argues against volume-filling mechanisms such as planetesimal bow shocks.</jats:p>
  • Access State: Open Access