Publication Date:
2013-08-29
Description:
A long-standing problem in the study of meteorites, with broad implications for the evolution of the solar system, is the source of heat for melting small planets. Meteorites, such as the eucrites, were obviously the result of a melting process on a small planet, yet the decay of the long-lived radionuclides present on the earth, K-40, U-235, U-238, and Th-232, could not have provided nearly enough heat to initiate melting approximately 4.5 aeons ago, even on bodies 1000 km in diameter. This problem addressed by H.C. Urey in 1955, who recognized that the presence of short-lived (and now extinct) radionuclides such as Al-26 (half-life of approximately 720,000 y) in the early solar system would have provided an abundant heat source for melting small asteroid-size bodies. Since any Al-26 initially present in the solar nebula would have completely decayed after only a few tens of millions of years, the problem became one of finding evidence of Al-26, in the form of excess Mg-26, in meteorites. The search for evidence of the Al-26 is briefly examined.
Keywords:
LUNAR AND PLANETARY EXPLORATION
Type:
Lunar and Planetary Inst., Nineteenth Lunar and Planetary Science Conference. Press abstracts; p 14-16
Format:
text
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