Skip to main content

Earthlike planets should readily form around other stars, meteorites suggest..



How hard is it to give birth to an Earth? To assemble the right mix of rock, metal, and water, in a balmy spot not too far from a star? For a long time, planetary scientists have thought Earth was a lucky accident, enriched with water and lighter “volatile” elements—such as nitrogen and carbon—by asteroids that had strayed in from the outer edges of the early Solar System, where those materials were abundant. But a series of new studies, including two published today in Science, suggests all the ingredients were much closer at hand when Earth was born.

The findings, based on painstaking chemical analysis of meteorites, imply that planet-forming disks around other stars, too, should be well-stocked with the makings of wet, rocky planets that might be hospitable to life. “It makes the enrichment in volatile elements of a planet more generic,” says Alessandro Morbidelli, a planetary scientist at the Côte d’Azur Observatory who wasn’t part of the new work. Even if a young planet doesn’t receive a delivery from the far reaches of the newborn planetary system, he says, “it doesn’t change habitability.”

Not that long ago, researchers thought the giant gas and dust disk that whirled around the early Sun more than 4 billion years ago had a fairly uniform composition. But that view was challenged by studies that tallied the ratios of certain isotopes found in the dozens of known species of meteorite. They indicated that the meteorites fell into two basic groups that likely originated in zones at different distances from the Sun. One group, known as carbonaceous chondrites, appears to have originated in the outer reaches of the early Solar System, beyond a proto-Jupiter and past the disk’s “snowline,” where temperatures cooled enough to allow water to freeze. In contrast, noncarbonaceous chondrites formed closer to the Sun. The isotopic signatures also suggested each zone was fed by material forged in different ancient and distant sources, such as supernovae and red giant stars.

Until recently, scientists were only able to detect the early isotopic fingerprints in metals such as chromium, titanium, and molybdenum, which are durable enough to have resisted the heat of the newborn Sun. A close match between the isotope ratios found in noncarbonaceous chondrites and those found in the same metals on Earth suggested much of Earth’s raw material came from the same nearby region as those meteorites.

But early searches for isotopic evidence that Earth’s lighter volatile elements also originated nearby came up dry. “People just started thinking [the evidence] didn’t exist,” says Rayssa Martins, a doctoral student in geochemistry at Imperial College London (ICL). And so the traditional view of those elements’ origin persisted: Many were assumed to come from a distant source, such as an outer region of the disk, where they might have condensed and then been pulled inward by the gravity of a forming planet, such as Jupiter.

Now, however, the meteorite divide has been detected in two moderately volatile elements, potassium and zinc. And the results suggest that much, but not all, of the planet’s volatiles also came from the noncarbonaceous reservoir, says Nicole Nie, a planetary scientist at the California Institute of Technology and lead author of the potassium-focused paper. “This is a game changer for cosmochemistry.”



The work was challenging, Nie says. Although a 2020 paper had identified what looked like ancient isotopic signatures in meteorite potassium, it only used two potassium isotopes, leaving out the much rarer potassium-40, whose signature in mass spectrometers is easy to confuse with those of calcium or argon. With only two isotopes, it was impossible to confirm that what the team saw reflected the chemical makeup of the primordial disk. And so Nie and her team measured all three potassium isotopes in 32 meteorites. They found that the potassium in the noncarbonaceous rocks showed isotopic patterns quite similar to those seen on Earth. “That was really surprising,” she says. Together, the findings suggested some 80% of Earth’s potassium came from nearby sources.

Three other teams have found a similar signal in the five stable isotopes of zinc. Two of the groups published their findings in Icarus last summer; work by the third, led by Martins, appears this week in Science. The findings complement each other, says Frédéric Moynier, a cosmochemist at the Paris Globe Institute of Physics and co-author of one Icarus study. “I agree with everything in the [Science] paper, because it’s very similar to our paper.” Overall, it appears that half or more of Earth’s zinc also came from the inner Solar System.

Other volatile elements probably had a similar origin, says Mark Rehkämper, a geochemist at ICL. “Zinc is not water. But where you have zinc, you will have more water.” And although the newly formed inner Solar System was low in volatile elements overall, there was still enough to create a habitable world. “The water has been here almost from the beginning,” Moynier says.

The hunt will now be on for additional volatile elements that exhibit the primordial fingerprints, says Thorsten Kleine, director of the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research and co-author of one of the zinc papers. “We have just written the proposals to do that, to be honest,” he says. Armed with enough data, especially for elements that are known to accumulate in a newborn planet at different stages of its growth, “you can do a detailed reconstruction of how the material that built the Earth changed over time.”

That could help resolve another question that has nagged at planetary scientists for decades: how quickly the rocky planets were built. They may have formed slowly, over tens of millions of years, as smaller rocky bodies collided with each other, or much more quickly, as vast clumps of material collapsed. The isotopes could hold clues—and not just for our Solar System. As the new work makes clear, the recipe for Earth is unlikely to be a one-off.

Comments

Popular Posts

NATIONWIDE REGISTRATION OF ALL ARTISANS

OGUN STATE FEDERAL SECRETARIAT COMPLEX, OKE-MOSAN, ABEOKUTA. E-MAIL: ndeogun2@yahoo.com ndeogun@gmail.com NATIONWIDE REGISTRATION OF ALL ARTISANS The Federal Government of Nigeria through one of her agencies NATIONAL DIRECTORATE OF EMPLOYMENT has commenced the registration of all categories of ARTISANS Nationwide. The registration covers amongst others Auto-Mobile, Autotronics/Mechatronics, Auto-Electrical, Arc and Gas Welding, Barbing, Catering and Hotel Management, Carpentry and Furniture Making, GSM Repairs, Computer Operations, Maintenance and Programming, Hairdressing, Cosmetology, Tailoring and Fashion Designing, Tie & Dye etc. For more enquiries/and registration, please visit any of the following centres nearest to you. * NDE Ogun State office, Federal Secretariat Complex Oke Mosan Abeokuta Tel: 08033475403, 08056562628, 07031365577 *ALL THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENTS in all the twenty (20) Local Government Areas in Ogun State. "NDE Skills Acquisition Training Ce...

List Of Schools Whose Post UTME Admission Screening Forms Are Out

Underlisted below is a list of Schools whose Post UTME Admission Screening Forms are out. Candidates who applied for admission into these schools are by this notice encouraged to visit their respective school portal or website for more detailed information on the Venue and date of their Post UTME screening test. Other Schools that are yet to release theirs will be published here on this page as soon as it is out. List Of Schools Whose Post UTME Admission Screening Forms Are Out In the meantime, listed below are the Schools whose Post UTME Admission Screening Forms have been released:- Nigerian Universities Post UTME Forms 2018/2019 *.Abia State University, Uturu – ABSU Post UTME – 2018/19 *.Michael Otedola College of Primary Education – MOCPED (Affiliated to UI) Post UTME – 2018/19 *.Paul University, Awka – PAU Post UTME – 2018/19 *.Joseph Ayo Babalola University – JABU Post UTME – 2018/19 *.Tai Solarin University of Education – TASUED Post UTME – 2018/19 *.Arthur Jarvis Univ...

List of universities that accept low jamb score for admission

This Nigerian Universities Accept Low JAMB Scores For Admission Admission, Articles, JAMB 4 Comments The significant issue confronted my JAMB candidates now is low JAMB scores. Along these lines, there are chances that huge numbers of them will fail to get admission into their schools of choice since numerous schools acknowledges 180 as their cut off check Hence, we have listed some schools that accept low JAMB Score for you. All you require is to keep an eye out when their post utme shape will be released and apply quickly, prepare and sit for their post utme examination. In the event that you perform well, you will be eligible to participate in their utme. By so doing, you don’t squander one more year or writing another JAMB. List of Nigerian Universities That Accepts Low JAMB Scores for Admission 1.Federal University of Technology Owerri, FUTO 2.University of Jos UNIJOS 3.Niger Delta University NDU 4.TAI Solarin University of Education TASUED 5.Federal University Dutsin-Ma,...