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Planetary differentiation isotopic ratios

For many years, meteorites have provided the only means to determine the abundance of 3He in protosolar material. The values obtained by mass spectroscopy techniques in the so-called planetary component of gas-rich meteorites have been critically examined by Geiss (1993) and Galli et al. (1995). The latter recommend the value 3He/4He= (1.5 0.1) x 10-4. The meteoritic value has been confirmed by in situ measurement of the He isotopic ratio in the atmosphere of Jupiter by the Galileo Probe Mass Spectrometer. The isotopic ratio obtained in this way, 3He/4He= (1.66 0.04) x 10 4 (Mahaffy et al. 1998), is slightly larger than, but consistent with, the ratio measured in meteorites, reflecting possible fractionation in the protosolar gas in favor of the the heavier isotope, or differential depletion in Jupiter s atmosphere. [Pg.344]

Such a measurement can tell us about the chemical evolution of oxygen, such as whether the isotopes differentiated via a thermal cycle in which lighter leO fractionates from the heavier lsO, much as Vostok ice-core oxygen ratios reveal the Earth s prehistoric climate. From this fixed point of the Sun s oxygen ratios, we can then trace the history of water in other planetary bodies since their birth in the solar nebulae through the subsequent cometary bombardment [13]. In NASA s search for water on the Moon, important for the establishment of a future Moon base, such isotopic ratios will determine whether the water is a vast mother lode or just a recent cometary impact residue. [Pg.255]

Weyer S, Anbar AD, Brey GP, Miinker C, Mezger K (2005) Iron isotope fractionation during planetary differentiation. Earth Planet Sci Lett 240 251-264 White JWC (1989) Stable hydrogen isotope ratios in plants a review of current theory and some potential applications. In Stable isotopes in ecological research. Ecological Studies 68. Springer Verlag, New York, p. 142-162... [Pg.277]

Vervoort, j.. White, W. Thorpe, R. 1994. Nd and Pb isotope ratios of the Abitibi greenstone belt new evidence for very early differentiation of the Earth. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 128, 215-229. [Pg.123]

The decay of Hf to is well suited to date core formation in planetary objects mainly for three reasons. First, owing to the Hf half-life of 9 Myr, detectable W isotope variations can only be produced in the first -60 Myr of the solar system. This timescale is appropriate for the formation of the Earth and Moon in particular and to planetary accretion and differentiation in general. Second, both Hf and W are refractory elements such that there is only limited fractionation of Hf and W in the solar nebula or among different planetary bodies (see above). The HfrW ratio of the bulk Earth therefore can be assumed to be chondritic and hence can be measured today. Third, Hf is a lithophile and W is a siderophile element such that the chondritic HfrW ratio of the Earth is fractionated internally by core formation. If core formation took place during the effective lifetime of Hf, the metal core (HfrW-O) will develop a deficit in the abundance of whereas the silicate mantle, owing to its enhanced Hf/W, will develop an excess of (7-P). [Pg.210]


See other pages where Planetary differentiation isotopic ratios is mentioned: [Pg.1201]    [Pg.503]    [Pg.319]    [Pg.293]    [Pg.434]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.462 , Pg.463 ]




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