The case for rarity of chondrules and calcium-aluminum-rich inclusions in the early solar system and some implications for astrophysical models
by Sears, D. W. G.
The high-temperature materials in chondritic meteorites, the chondrules (silicate spherules produced by hash heating) and refractory inclusions (the CAI, or calcium-aluminum-rich inclusions), have been used to place major constraints on astrophysical models for the early solar system. Among the meteorites falling to Earth, the CAI are rare, being only 15% by volume of a class that constitutes 0.84% of observed falls, however chondrules are ubiquitous. Here it is pointed out similar to 96% of the meteorites entering the atmosphere contain few or no chondrules because atmospheric passage destroys such meteorites 1000 times more effectively than the tougher chondrule-rich material. Furthermore, the mechanisms for transferring meteorites from the asteroid belt to Earth do not sample the belt representatively, so that even the 4% of chondrule-rich material entering the atmosphere may be an overestimate. Most asteroids have surfaces resembling meteorite classes that are chondrule-poor or chondrule-free. Foreign clasts in meteorites, which are an independent sampling of asteroidal material, usually resemble chondrule-poor or chondrule-free carbonaceous chondrites. Cosmic-ray ages and gas-retention ages for meteorites indicate that most stony meteorites are coming from just a few asteroids. A strong case can thus be made that chondrules and CAI were rare in the inner solar system during planet and planetesimal formation and that they do not provide a strong constraint on astrophysical ideas for the evolution of the early solar nebula.
- Journal
- Astrophysical Journal
- Volume
- 498
- Issue
- 2
- Year
- 1998
- Start Page
- 773-778
- URL
- https://dx.doi.org/10.1086/305589
- ISBN/ISSN
- 1538-4357; 0004-637X
- DOI
- 10.1086/305589