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The Diversity of Refractory Organic Material in CometsOrganic matter exists in comets (most notably in 81P/Wild 2 [Stardust], 67P/Churyomov- Gerasimenko (67P/C-G) [Rosetta], chondritic porous IDPS, and UCAMMs) and in primitive carbonaceous chondrites that likely retain some chemistry that reflects an origin in the prenatal cold molecular cloud (Alexander+2017). Heavy isotopic enrichments, 15N/14N and possibly D/H, signify preserved molecular cloud organics. In the cold outer disk, if grains are lofted above the disk mid-plane then organics likely experience significant UV processing (Ciesla+2012). In remote sensing of comet comae, organics in the dust are considered refractory or semirefractory. Semi-refractory organics have limited comae lifetimes and produce distributed sources of molecules (H2CO and CO). Rosetta's close passes of 67P/C-G's nucleus (10-15 km) reveals a distributed source of glycine, methyl amine and ethylamine (Altwegg+2016). Cometary samples and primitive meteorites have two types of organic matter: (1) acid-insoluble organic matter (IOM), which is a macromolecular polymer with a mixture of aromatic and aliphatic moieties, and (2) labile, soluble organics, which includes the amino acids, such as glycine (Stardust, Elsila+2009). Meteoritic IOM is robust, withstanding experimental temperatures of 1200 K (Dobrica+2011, Cody+2008). Nanoglobules are a type of IOM; they have a distinct physical structure, but often share the same chemistry as the other IOM from the same meteorite. Moderate-sized PAHs (20 C-atoms) are detected in Stardust samples (Clemett+2010). Refractory organic IOM is ubiquitous yet has a great diversity of abundances between cometary samples. IOM is in primitive chondrites, 67P/C-G (Rosetta), 81P/Wild 2 (Stardust), 1P/Halley, 26P/Grigg-Skjellerup, UCAMMs, anhydrous IDPs, and in chondritic porous IDPs (CP IDPs) and larger cluster IDPs (e.g., Fray+2016, Fomenkova+94, Busemann+ 09, Dobrica+2011, Dobrica+2012). 81P's refractory organic matter is of two types (De Gregorio+2011): nanoglobules of highly aromatic refractory organic matter and polyaromatic carbonyl-containing organic matter, which is similar to IOM in primitive meteorites and IDPs. Fray+2017 estimate that 50% of carbon in 67P/C-G is in IOM. 67P/C-G's organics appear to lack the soluble organic matter, aliphatic carbon, amino acids, and PAHs (Fray+2016). Other notable aspects of the diversity in IOM in cometary samples are the ranges of atomic ratios of N/C, O/C, and H/C, and the range of isotopic enrichments of 15N/14N and D/H. Aqueous and thermal processing on asteroids changes the balance of soluble to insoluble organics, and may be important for diversifying the range of OM delivered to Earth.
Document ID
20180007837
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Abstract
Authors
Wooden, Diane
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Stroud, Rhonda
(Naval Research Lab. Washington, DC, United States)
Date Acquired
November 27, 2018
Publication Date
July 14, 2018
Subject Category
Astronomy
Report/Patent Number
ARC-E-DAA-TN58411
Report Number: ARC-E-DAA-TN58411
Meeting Information
Meeting: COSPAR Scientific Assembly 2018
Location: Pasadena, CA
Country: United States
Start Date: July 14, 2018
End Date: July 22, 2018
Sponsors: Committee on Space Research
Funding Number(s)
WBS: WBS 811073.02.33.01.61
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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