TY - JOUR
T1 - Final reports of the stardust interstellar preliminary examination
AU - 30,000 Stardust at home dusters
AU - Westphal, Andrew J.
AU - Bechtel, Hans A.
AU - Brenker, Frank E.
AU - Butterworth, Anna L.
AU - Flynn, George
AU - Frank, David R.
AU - Gainsforth, Zack
AU - Hillier, Jon K.
AU - Postberg, Frank
AU - Simionovici, Alexandre S.
AU - Sterken, Veerle J.
AU - Stroud, Rhonda M.
AU - Allen, Carlton
AU - Anderson, David
AU - Ansari, Asna
AU - Bajt, Saša
AU - Bastien, Ron K.
AU - Bassim, Nabil
AU - Borg, Janet
AU - Bridges, John
AU - Brownlee, Donald E.
AU - Burchell, Mark
AU - Burghammer, Manfred
AU - Changela, Hitesh
AU - Cloetens, Peter
AU - Davis, Andrew M.
AU - Doll, Ryan
AU - Floss, Christine
AU - Grün, Eberhard
AU - Heck, Philipp R.
AU - Hoppe, Peter
AU - Hudson, Bruce
AU - Huth, Joachim
AU - Hvide, Brit
AU - Kearsley, Anton
AU - King, Ashley J.
AU - Lai, Barry
AU - Leitner, Jan
AU - Lemelle, Laurence
AU - Leroux, Hugues
AU - Leonard, Ariel
AU - Lettieri, Robert
AU - Marchant, William
AU - Nittler, Larry R.
AU - Ogliore, Ryan
AU - Ong, Wei Ja
AU - Price, Mark C.
AU - Sandford, Scott A.
AU - Tresseras, Juan Angel Sans
AU - Schmitz, Sylvia
AU - Schoonjans, Tom
AU - Silversmit, Geert
AU - Solé, Vicente A.
AU - Srama, Ralf
AU - Stadermann, Frank
AU - Stephan, Thomas
AU - Stodolna, Julien
AU - Sutton, Steven
AU - Trieloff, Mario
AU - Tsou, Peter
AU - Tsuchiyama, Akira
AU - Tyliszczak, Tolek
AU - Vekemans, Bart
AU - Vincze, Laszlo
AU - Von Korff, Joshua
AU - Wordsworth, Naomi
AU - Zevin, Daniel
AU - Zolensky, Michael E.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Meteoritical Society, 2014.
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - With the discovery of bona fide extraterrestrial materials in the Stardust Interstellar Dust Collector, NASA now has a fundamentally new returned sample collection, after the Apollo, Antarctic meteorite, Cosmic Dust, Genesis, Stardust Cometary, Hayabusa, and Exposed Space Hardware samples. Here, and in companion papers in this volume, we present the results from the Preliminary Examination of this collection, the Stardust Interstellar Preliminary Examination (ISPE). We found extraterrestrial materials in two tracks in aerogel whose trajectories and morphology are consistent with an origin in the interstellar dust stream, and in residues in four impacts in the aluminum foil collectors. While the preponderance of evidence, described in detail in companion papers in this volume, points toward an interstellar origin for some of these particles, alternative origins have not yet been eliminated, and definitive tests through isotopic analyses were not allowed under the terms of the ISPE. In this summary, we answer the central questions of the ISPE: How many tracks in the collector are consistent in their morphology and trajectory with interstellar particles? How many of these potential tracks are consistent with real interstellar particles, based on chemical analysis? Conversely, what fraction of candidates are consistent with either a secondary or interplanetary origin? What is the mass distribution of these particles, and what is their state? Are they particulate or diffuse? Is there any crystalline material? How many detectable impact craters (>100 nm) are there in the foils, and what is their size distribution? How many of these craters have analyzable residue that is consistent with extraterrestrial material? And finally, can craters from secondaries be recognized through crater morphology (e.g., ellipticity)?.
AB - With the discovery of bona fide extraterrestrial materials in the Stardust Interstellar Dust Collector, NASA now has a fundamentally new returned sample collection, after the Apollo, Antarctic meteorite, Cosmic Dust, Genesis, Stardust Cometary, Hayabusa, and Exposed Space Hardware samples. Here, and in companion papers in this volume, we present the results from the Preliminary Examination of this collection, the Stardust Interstellar Preliminary Examination (ISPE). We found extraterrestrial materials in two tracks in aerogel whose trajectories and morphology are consistent with an origin in the interstellar dust stream, and in residues in four impacts in the aluminum foil collectors. While the preponderance of evidence, described in detail in companion papers in this volume, points toward an interstellar origin for some of these particles, alternative origins have not yet been eliminated, and definitive tests through isotopic analyses were not allowed under the terms of the ISPE. In this summary, we answer the central questions of the ISPE: How many tracks in the collector are consistent in their morphology and trajectory with interstellar particles? How many of these potential tracks are consistent with real interstellar particles, based on chemical analysis? Conversely, what fraction of candidates are consistent with either a secondary or interplanetary origin? What is the mass distribution of these particles, and what is their state? Are they particulate or diffuse? Is there any crystalline material? How many detectable impact craters (>100 nm) are there in the foils, and what is their size distribution? How many of these craters have analyzable residue that is consistent with extraterrestrial material? And finally, can craters from secondaries be recognized through crater morphology (e.g., ellipticity)?.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84910102515&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/maps.12221
DO - 10.1111/maps.12221
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84910102515
SN - 1086-9379
VL - 49
SP - 1720
EP - 1733
JO - Meteoritics and Planetary Science
JF - Meteoritics and Planetary Science
IS - 9
ER -