Chondrules from high-velocity collisions: thermal histories and the agglomeration problem
Abstract
We assess whether chondrules, once-molten mm-sized spheres filling the oldest meteorites, could have formed from super-km s-1 collisions between planetesimals in the solar nebula. High-velocity collisions release hot and dense clouds of silicate vapour which entrain and heat chondrule precursors. Thermal histories of CB chondrules are reproduced for colliding bodies ~10-100 km in radius. The slower cooling rates of non-CB, porphyritic chondrules point to colliders with radii ≳ 500 km. How chondrules, collisionally dispersed into the nebula, agglomerated into meteorite parent bodies remains a mystery. The same orbital eccentricities and inclinations that enable energetic collisions prevent planetesimals from re-accreting chondrules efficiently and without damage; thus the sedimentary laminations of the CB/CH chondrite Isheyevo are hard to explain by direct fallback of collisional ejecta. At the same time, planetesimal surfaces may be littered with the shattered remains of chondrules. The micron-sized igneous particles recovered from comet 81P/Wild-2 may have originated from in-situ collisions and subsequent accretion in the proto-Kuiper belt, obviating the need to transport igneous solids across the nebula. Asteroid sample returns from Hayabusa2 and OSIRIS-REx may similarly contain chondrule fragments.
- Publication:
-
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
- Pub Date:
- May 2021
- DOI:
- 10.1093/mnras/stab503
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2009.10093
- Bibcode:
- 2021MNRAS.503.3297C
- Keywords:
-
- comets: general;
- Kuiper belt: general;
- meteorites;
- meteors;
- meteoroids;
- minor planets;
- asteroids: general;
- planets and satellites: formation;
- protoplanetary discs;
- Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics;
- Physics - Geophysics
- E-Print:
- Final MNRAS accepted and proofed version. Minor updates to Sections 2.3 and 3.2 discussing the treatment of the nebular headwind in previous work, plus additional references