Titanium Isotopes Provide Clues to Lunar Origin

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Interior structure, origin and evolution of the Moon Key Features of the Moon: pages
Advertisements

Mantle composition 1800s meteorites contain similar minerals to terrestrial rocks Hypothesis that meteorites come from asteroid belt and originate from.
Chapter 8 Formation of the Solar System
Formation of the Solar System
Formation of our Moon: The Giant Impact Hypothesis Michelle Kirchoff Southwest Research Institute Center for Lunar Origin and Evolution.
Damp Moon RisingDamp Moon Rising Francis McCubbin and co-workers measured the OH concentrations in.
Earth has formed in our solar system  We need to understand planetary formation Constraints: Astronomical observations Study of meteorites Study of planets.
ASTR100 (Spring 2008) Introduction to Astronomy The Formation of Planets Prof. D.C. Richardson Sections
PSRDPSRD presents Compositional Balancing Before Moon Formation A striking feature of the Earth and Moon.
Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 311 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 8.
Astr The origin and early evolution of the solar system.
TERRESTRIAL PLANET FORMATION & THE FORMATION OF A WATER-RICH EARTH
Origin of the Solar System Astronomy 311 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 8.
1 Lecture #02 - Earth History. 2 The Fine Structure of The Universe : The Elements Elements are a basic building block of molecules, and only 92 natural.
Formation of Mercury By Triana Henz. In the beginning… There was a giant cloud of particles within the Milky Way Particles start to rotate The cloud starts.
Lunar Facts The moon ended its formation period approximately 4 billion years ago. After the period of formation, the surface of the moon continued to.
COSMOCHEMISTRY iLLUSTRATED Water in the Lunar InteriorWater in the Lunar Interior Francis McCubbin and co-workers measured the OH concentrations in lunar.
Formation of the Moon By Brad Shaver. Previous Models Fission Capture Binary Accretion.
Theories of the Origin of the Moon. Theory One early theory was that the moon is a sister world that formed in orbit around Earth as the Earth formed.
Theories about the Moon and the Solar System By: Rania Tabunot.
Theories: Origin of Earth and Moon Scientists look for Evidence and an Explanation.
Earth and Moon Statistics By the Lunar and Planetary Institute For use in teacher workshops.
Origin of the Solar System. Stars spew out 1/2 their mass as gas & dust as they die.
The Moon Formation. Lunar Facts The moon ended its formation period approximately 4 billion years ago. After the period of formation, the surface of the.
Lecture 3 – Planetary Migration, the Moon, and the Late Heavy Bombardment Abiol 574.
Origin of Solar System Lecture 15. Key Properties of our Solar System Any theory of the origin of the solar system must be able to explain following key.
Space Asteroids Raynaldo 6B.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Solar System Overview Earth, as viewed by the Voyager spacecraft.
Formation of the Solar System
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 8 Formation of the Solar System.
Moon Lesson 3 Formation of the Moon. More detail on the lunar composition The Moon’s bulk composition is similar to the Earth’s but not identical. The.
Universe Tenth Edition
The Formation of Our Solar System The Nebular Hypothesis.
Origins of the Earth/Moon System Ryan Huberman and Aaron Bloom.
The Moon Several theories have been proposed to explain the origin of the Moon.
The Solar System.
Theories of Formation for the Moon
Meteorite Formation Times and the Age of Jupiter
Regular Features of the Solar System
The Solar System.
Origin of the solar system Solar Systems Form by Accretion Let us study the sequence in slightly more detail: The processes by which.
Origin of the Moon 22 September 2017.
Formation of the Solar System
Zinc Isotopes Provide Clues to Volatile Loss During Moon Formation
Water in Asteroid 4 Vesta
The Solar System.
Human Understanding of both Earth and Space has Changed Over Time
Theories: Origin of Earth and Moon
Notes The Moon.
Origin of the Moon 13 February 2018.
Meteorite Evidence for a Complicated Protoplanetary Disk
A Traveling CAI Overview: Calcium-aluminum-rich inclusions (CAIs) are the oldest solids to form in the Solar System. They occur in every type of chondrite,
Making and Differentiating Planets
Theories: Origin of Earth and Moon
Titanium Isotopes Provide Clues to Lunar Origin
The Moon.
Moon enriched in 182W/184W compared to Earth.
Compositional Balancing Before Moon Formation
Zinc Isotopes Provide Clues to Volatile Loss During Moon Formation
Damp Moon Rising Overview: The discovery in 2008 by Alberto Saal (Brown University) and colleagues that lunar volcanic glasses contain water surprised.
This imaginative painting shows a possible future human settlement on ___________. Settlers might live in domes to protect themselves from the harsh climate.
Leftovers from Ancient Lunar Impactors
Origin of the Moon 11 September 2018.
Lunar Oddities and The Origin of the Moon
Date Vocabulary moon: a planetary body (usually composed of solid elements) that orbits another planetary body. Announcements:
The Solar System.
Our Solar System and Its Origin
3A Objectives Describe the nebular theory in detail.
Volatile Elements Test Models for the Origin of the Moon
1.1.1a and 1.1.1b ORIGIN OF THE EARTH’S MOTION BASED ON THE ORIGIN OF THE GALAXY AND SOLAR SYSTEM.
Presentation transcript:

Titanium Isotopes Provide Clues to Lunar Origin The Moon may have formed by the impact of a Mars-sized object with Earth. Planetary accretion models suggest that the impactor and Earth would have had different isotopic compositions… …but titanium has the same isotopic composition in both Earth and Moon. The dynamics of planet formation and of the giant impact need a closer look. Overview: The titanium isotopic mix is essentially identical in Earth and Moon, important new information with implications for the origin of the planets. The idea that the Moon formed as the result of the giant impact of a Mars-sized impactor with the still-growing Earth explains two central facts about the Earth-Moon system: its total angular momentum (Earth's spin and the Moon's orbital motion), and the sizes of the metallic cores of the Earth (large) and Moon (tiny). This gives cosmochemists some confidence in the hypothesis, but they would greatly appreciate additional compositional tests. One undisputed point is the identical abundance of the three oxygen isotopes in Earth and Moon. Junjun Zhang and colleagues at the University of Chicago (USA) and the University of Bern (Switzerland) have added another isotopic system to the cosmochemical testing tool kit, titanium isotopes. They find that the ratio of titanium-50 (50Ti) to titanium-47 (47Ti) is identical in Earth and Moon to within four parts per million. In contrast, other solar system materials, such as carbonaceous chondrites, vary by considerably more than this—up to 150 times as much.  The identical oxygen and titanium isotopic compositions in Earth and Moon are surprising in light of what we think we know about planet formation and formation of the Moon after a giant impact. The variations in oxygen and titanium isotopes among meteorite types suggest that it is unlikely that the Moon-forming giant impactor would have had the same isotopic composition as the Earth. Simulations show that the Moon ends up constructed mostly (40-75%) from the impactor materials. Thus, the Moon ought to have different isotopic composition than does Earth. The isotopes might have exchanged in the complicated, messy proto-lunar disk (as has been suggested for oxygen isotopes), making them the same. However, Zhang and colleagues suggest that this exchange is unlikely for a refractory element like titanium. Could the impact simulations be greatly overestimating the contributions from the impactor? Was the mixing of building-block materials throughout the inner solar system much less than thought so that the impactor and early Earth actually had the same isotopic compositions? Zhang and coauthors also draw attention to the possibility that the impactor could have been rich in ice, so that the Moon formed mostly from Earth's rocky materials. Questions abound as our understanding of planet formation evolves. Whatever the cause of the titanium-isotope homogeneity in the Earth-Moon system, the new data from titanium isotopes herald new directions for understanding the complicated processes involved in forming the Moon by a giant impact. This topic has great possibilities for class discussion of how stable isotopes fractionate. Other systems are also the same (within uncertainties) between Earth and Moon, including Cr, W, and Mg (see our presentation, Zinc isotopes and lunar formation.ppt), which raises the question of fractionation of only the isotopes of volatile elements. Left : Artist's conception of the giant impact that may have led to formation of the Moon. An impactor the size of Mars smashed into the proto-Earth, increasing the Earth's mass by about 10% (the final big increment in Earth's construction) and tossing material into orbit. Computer simulations suggest that at least 40% (possibly as much as 75%) of the material that ended up in orbit came from the impactor. The metallic core of the impactor was driven deep inside the Earth to become part of its core. Planetary scientists often call the hypothetical impactor "Theia," named for the mother of Selene, the Moon goddess of Greek mythology. Right: Epsilon 50Ti values [ 50Ti / 47Ti in samples divided by 50Ti / 47Ti in a standard, expressed in parts per ten thousand, minus 1 ] for Earth, Moon, and assorted meteorite groups. Moon (red line) and Earth (blue line) values are identical to within 0.04 ε units, or only 4 parts per million. The other materials range left and right of the Earth-Moon value; see the color bars, individual data points for the terrestrial and chondrite samples are not shown. In reality, the lunar points tend to be slightly lower than the terrestrial value, but that is caused by changes in the titanium isotopes due to long exposure to cosmic rays while the samples were sitting near the lunar surface, patiently waiting for astronauts to collect them. Some resided within a few meters of the surface for hundreds of millions of years. Zhang was able to correct for these cosmic ray effects and the narrow band for the Moon (shown in red) represents the ε50Ti value for lunar samples before they were exposed to cosmic rays on the lunar surface. Reference: Zhang, J., Dauphas, N., Davis, A. M., Leya, I., and Fedkin, A. (2012) The Proto-Earth as a Significant Source of Lunar Material, Nature Geoscience, v. 5(4), p. 251-255, doi:10.1038/ngeo1429. Ti Isotopes in Earth and Moon