Abstract
The formation and differentiation processes of planetesimals—small bodies in the solar system—remain actively debated. Planetesimal differentiation is known to have occurred early (<1.5 Myr after the formation of Ca-Al-rich inclusions), as attested by the ages of iron meteorites. Metal-silicate segregation implies global-scale melting, induced by heat released from short-lived radiogenic isotopes, and the consequent generation of a silicate magma ocean. Thermodynamic calculations show that silicate magma crystallisation would have induced silicate-silicate differentiation, leading to the formation of a thick olivine-dominated “mantle” and a thin basaltic “crust”. However, thermodynamic modelling of magma ocean crystallisation does not produce any silica phases. Here I experimentally show that crystallisation of a chondritic liquid does not follow the thermodynamically predicted path. Silica phases are generated early (before 55% differentiation) as a function of initial magma ocean temperature. As cristobalite or liquid silica phases are less dense than residual liquids or olivine, silica phases could have formed proto-crusts that would have acted as buoyant lids at the surfaces of planetesimals, allowing the eventual accretion and preservation of debris (chondrites). Moreover, the destruction of such a crust by impacts could provide an explanation for the origin of the silica reservoir that condensed around some chondrules.
Highlights
The formation and differentiation processes of planetesimals—small bodies in the solar system— remain actively debated
Thermodynamic calculations of magma ocean crystallisation on small bodies like Vesta are relatively simple because the pressure at the bottom of the magma ocean is estimated to have been inferior to 1 kbar; the Université de Lorraine, CNRS, CRPG, UMR 7358, 15 rue Notre Dame des Pauvres, F-54501, Vandoeuvre-lès-Nancy, France. email: francois.faure@univ-lorraine.fr www.nature.com/scientificreports/
Differentiation sequences determined for chondritic magmas produce dunite at the beginning of crystallisation followed by variable amounts of harzbugite, and the end of differentiation is marked by the production of basaltic magma[16]
Summary
The formation and differentiation processes of planetesimals—small bodies in the solar system— remain actively debated. I show, in contrast, that silica phases can be produced early during magma ocean crystallisation because pyroxene fails to nucleate.
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have