TY - JOUR
T1 - Stardust interstellar preliminary examination VII
T2 - Synchrotron X-ray fluorescence analysis of six Stardust interstellar candidates measured with the Advanced Photon Source 2-ID-D microprobe
AU - 30,000 Stardust at home dusters
AU - Flynn, George J.
AU - Sutton, Steven R.
AU - Lai, Barry
AU - Wirick, Sue
AU - Allen, Carlton
AU - Anderson, David
AU - Ansari, Asna
AU - Bajt, Saša
AU - Bastien, Ron K.
AU - Bassim, Nabil
AU - Bechtel, Hans A.
AU - Borg, Janet
AU - Brenker, Frank E.
AU - Bridges, John
AU - Brownlee, Donald E.
AU - Burchell, Mark
AU - Burghammer, Manfred
AU - Butterworth, Anna L.
AU - Changela, Hitesh
AU - Cloetens, Peter
AU - Davis, Andrew M.
AU - Doll, Ryan
AU - Floss, Christine
AU - Frank, David
AU - Gainsforth, Zack
AU - Grün, Eberhard
AU - Heck, Philipp R.
AU - Hillier, Jon K.
AU - Hoppe, Peter
AU - Hudson, Bruce
AU - Huth, Joachim
AU - Hvide, Brit
AU - Kearsley, Anton
AU - King, Ashley J.
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 - Postberg, Frank
AU - Price, Mark C.
AU - Sandford, Scott A.
AU - Tresseras, Juan Angel Sans
AU - Schmitz, Sylvia
AU - Schoonjans, Tom
AU - Silversmit, Geert
AU - Simionovici, Alexandre
AU - Solé, Vicente A.
AU - Srama, Ralf
AU - Stadermann, Frank J.
AU - Stephan, Thomas
AU - Sterken, Veerle
AU - Stodolna, Julien
AU - Stroud, Rhonda M.
AU - Trieloff, Mario
AU - Tsou, Peter
AU - Tsuchiyama, Akira
AU - Tyliszczak, Tolek
AU - Vekemans, Bart
AU - Vincze, Laszlo
AU - Von Korff, Joshua
AU - Westphal, Andrew J.
AU - Wordsworth, Naomi
AU - Zevin, Daniel
AU - Zolensky, Michael E.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Meteoritical Society, 2014.
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - The NASA Stardust spacecraft exposed an aerogel collector to the interstellar dust passing through the solar system. We performed X-ray fluorescence element mapping and abundance measurements, for elements 19 ≤ Z ≤ 30, on six "interstellar candidates," potential interstellar impacts identified by Stardust@Home and extracted for analyses in picokeystones. One, I1044,3,33, showed no element hot-spots within the designated search area. However, we identified a nearby surface feature, consistent with the impact of a weak, high-speed particle having an approximately chondritic (CI) element abundance pattern, except for factor-of-ten enrichments in K and Zn and an S depletion. This hot-spot, containing approximately 10 fg of Fe, corresponds to an approximately 350 nm chondritic particle, small enough to be missed by Stardust@Home, indicating that other techniques may be necessary to identify all interstellar candidates. Only one interstellar candidate, I1004,1,2, showed a track. The terminal particle has large enrichments in S, Ti, Cr, Mn, Ni, Cu, and Zn relative to Fe-normalized CI values. It has high Al/Fe, but does not match the Ni/Fe range measured for samples of Al-deck material from the Stardust sample return capsule, which was within the field-of-view of the interstellar collector. A third interstellar candidate, I1075,1,25, showed an Al-rich surface feature that has a composition generally consistent with the Al-deck material, suggesting that it is a secondary particle. The other three interstellar candidates, I1001,1,16, I1001,2,17, and I1044,2,32, showed no impact features or tracks, but allowed assessment of submicron contamination in this aerogel, including Fe hot-spots having CI-like Ni/Fe ratios, complicating the search for CI-like interstellar/interplanetary dust.
AB - The NASA Stardust spacecraft exposed an aerogel collector to the interstellar dust passing through the solar system. We performed X-ray fluorescence element mapping and abundance measurements, for elements 19 ≤ Z ≤ 30, on six "interstellar candidates," potential interstellar impacts identified by Stardust@Home and extracted for analyses in picokeystones. One, I1044,3,33, showed no element hot-spots within the designated search area. However, we identified a nearby surface feature, consistent with the impact of a weak, high-speed particle having an approximately chondritic (CI) element abundance pattern, except for factor-of-ten enrichments in K and Zn and an S depletion. This hot-spot, containing approximately 10 fg of Fe, corresponds to an approximately 350 nm chondritic particle, small enough to be missed by Stardust@Home, indicating that other techniques may be necessary to identify all interstellar candidates. Only one interstellar candidate, I1004,1,2, showed a track. The terminal particle has large enrichments in S, Ti, Cr, Mn, Ni, Cu, and Zn relative to Fe-normalized CI values. It has high Al/Fe, but does not match the Ni/Fe range measured for samples of Al-deck material from the Stardust sample return capsule, which was within the field-of-view of the interstellar collector. A third interstellar candidate, I1075,1,25, showed an Al-rich surface feature that has a composition generally consistent with the Al-deck material, suggesting that it is a secondary particle. The other three interstellar candidates, I1001,1,16, I1001,2,17, and I1044,2,32, showed no impact features or tracks, but allowed assessment of submicron contamination in this aerogel, including Fe hot-spots having CI-like Ni/Fe ratios, complicating the search for CI-like interstellar/interplanetary dust.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84910035010
U2 - 10.1111/maps.12144
DO - 10.1111/maps.12144
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84910035010
SN - 1086-9379
VL - 49
SP - 1626
EP - 1644
JO - Meteoritics and Planetary Science
JF - Meteoritics and Planetary Science
IS - 9
ER -