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Measuring Shock Stage of ltokawa Regolith Grains by Electron Back-Scattered Diffraction and Synchrotron X-Ray Diffraction We have been analyzing Itokawa samples in order to definitively establish the degree of shock experienced by the regolith of asteroid Itokawa, and to devise a bridge between shock determinations by standard light optical petrography, crystal structures as determined by electron and X-ray diffraction techniques. We are making measurements of olivine crystal structures and using these to elucidate critical regolith impact processes. We use electron back-scattered diffraction (EBSD) and synchrotron X-ray diffraction (SXRD). We are comparing the Itokawa samples to L and LL chondrite meteorites chosen to span the shock scale experienced by Itokawa, specifically Chainpur (LL3.4, Shock Stage 1), Semarkona (LL3.00, S2), Kilabo (LL6, S3), NWA100 (L6, S4) and Chelyabinsk (LL5, S4). In SXRD we measure the line broadening of olivine reflections as a measure of shock stage. In this presentation we concentrate on the EBSD work. We employed JSC's Supra 55 variable pressure FEG-SEM and Bruker EBSD system. We are not seeking actual strain values, but rather indirect strain-related measurements such as extent of intra-grain lattice rotation, and determining whether shock state "standards" (meteorite samples of accepted shock state, and appropriate small grain size) show strain measurements that may be statistically differentiated, using a sampling of particles (number and size range) typical of asteroid regoliths. Using our system we determined that a column pressure of 9 Pa and no C-coating on the sample was optimal. We varied camera exposure time and gain to optimize mapping performance, concluding that 320x240 pattern pixilation, frame averaging of 3, 15 kV, and low extractor voltage yielded an acceptable balance of hit rate (>90%), speed (11 fps) and map quality using an exposure time of 30 ms (gain 650). We found that there was no strong effect of step size on Grain Orientation Spread (GOS) and Grain Reference Orientation Deviation angle (GROD-a) distribution; there was some effect on grain average Kernel Average Misorientation (KAM) (reduced with smaller step size for the same grain), as expected. We monitored GOS, Maximum Orientation Spread (MOS) and GROD-a differences between whole olivine grains and sub-sampled areas, and found that there were significant differences between the whole grain dataset and subsets, as well as between subsets, likely due to sampling-related "noise". Also, in general (and logically) whole grains exhibit greater degrees of cumulative lattice rotation. Sampling size affects the apparent strain character of the grain, at least as measured by GOS, MOS and GROD-a. There were differences in the distribution frequencies of GOS and MOS between shock stages, and in plots of MOS and GOS vs. grain diameter. These results are generally consistent with those reported this year. However, it is unknown whether the differences between samples of different shock states exceeds the clustering of these values to the extent that shock stage determinations can still be made with confidence. We are investigating this by examination of meteorites with higher shock stage 4 to 5. Our research will improve our understanding of how small, primitive solar system bodies formed and evolved, and improve understanding of the processes that determine the history and future of habitability of environments on other solar system bodies. The results will directly enrich the ongoing asteroid and comet exploration missions by NASA and JAXA, and broaden our understanding of the origin and evolution of small bodies in the early solar system, and elucidate the nature of asteroid and comet regolith.
Document ID
20170009180
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Abstract
Authors
Zolensky, Michael
(NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Mikouchi, Takashi
(Tokyo Univ. Japan)
Hagiya, Kenji
(Hyogo Univ. Hyogo, Japan)
Ohsumi, Kazumasa
(Japan Synchrotron Research Inst. Hyogo, Japan)
Martinez, James
(NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Hagiya, Kenji
(Hyogo Univ. Hyogo, Japan)
Sitzman, Scott
(Aerospace Corp. El Segundo, CA, United States)
Terada, Yasuko
(Japan Synchrotron Research Inst. Hyogo, Japan)
Yagi, Naoto
(Japan Synchrotron Research Inst. Hyogo, Japan)
Komatsu, Mutsumi
(Graduate Univ. for Advanced Studies (SOKENDAI) Tachikawa, Japan)
Ozawa, Hikaru
(Hyogo Univ. Hyogo, Japan)
Taki, Yuta
(Hyogo Univ. Hyogo, Japan)
Yamatsuta, Yuta
(Hyogo Univ. Hyogo, Japan)
Takenouchi, Atsushi
(Tokyo Univ. Japan)
Hasegawa, Hikari
(Tokyo Univ. Japan)
Ono, Haruka
(Tokyo Univ. Japan)
Higashi, Kotaro
(Tokyo Univ. Japan)
Takata, Masaki
(Japan Synchrotron Research Inst. Hyogo, Japan)
Hirata, Arashi
(Hyogo Univ. Hyogo, Japan)
Kurokawa, Ayaka
(Hyogo Univ. Hyogo, Japan)
Yamaguchi, Shoki
(Hyogo Univ. Hyogo, Japan)
Date Acquired
September 28, 2017
Publication Date
December 4, 2017
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration
Report/Patent Number
JSC-CN-40457
Meeting Information
Meeting: Hayabusa 2017: Symposium of the Solar System Materials
Location: Tokyo
Country: United States
Start Date: December 4, 2017
End Date: December 7, 2017
Sponsors: Lunar and Planetary Inst.
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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