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Heavy bombardment experienced by the planets in the early Solar System by Staff Writers Heidelberg, Germany (SPX) Oct 01, 2021
At approximately 500 kilometres in size, Vesta is the largest known asteroid in the Solar System. Like its numerous companions in the Main Asteroid Belt, it is made of the 'primordial matter' of the Solar System. A new study published in Nature Astronomy concludes that Vesta was exposed to an extensive impact series of large rocky bodies much earlier than previously assumed. This suggests that the entire inner Solar System, and thus the rocky planets, was affected by such an early 'bombardment'. As such, this observation also provides important insights into the early development of our Earth. This is the conclusion reached by an international research team with the participation of geoscientists from the German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Zentrum fur Luft- und Raumfahrt; DLR), the University of Heidelberg, the Free University of Berlin and the Berlin Natural History Museum. As part of the study Wladimir Neumann from the DLR Institute of Planetary Research and the Institute of Geosciences at the University of Heidelberg carried out numerous calculations to model Vesta's thermal evolution. This made it possible to better narrow down the time period in which the early impacts occurred. "In order for the material of the impacting bodies to be mixed into the rocky mantle of young Vesta in a reasonably homogeneous way, the mantle must have been hot enough and circulate convectively, driven by internal heat," Neumann explains. "Our models have shown that this is only true for impacts within the short time span of around 4.56 to 4.50 billion years ago - almost immediately after the formation of the planets in the inner Solar System."
Rare meteorites provide important evidence This finding is also based on analyses of meteorites in terrestrial collections whose parent body is almost certainly Vesta - the so-called HED meteorites. The acronym HED is derived from the first letters of a subgroup of rare stony meteorites, the howardites, eucrites and diogenites. This group shows similarities to magmatic rocks on Earth. Due to their chemical composition, they must have come from an already differentiated planetary body in which heavy, metallic elements accumulated in a core that was surrounded by a lighter rock mantle and an even lighter crust, and in which magmatic processes caused changes.
Planetary bodies continued to grow as a result of bombardment Then, in their final stage, by impacts of increasingly larger rocky bodies. This is also true of the asteroid Vesta. During the growth process, Vesta increasingly heated up during the early phase of its development, resulting in the formation of a near-surface ocean of molten silicate rock and a liquid metallic core below. Over time, other bodies struck Vesta's crust, causing material to be hurled into space and transported into the inner Solar System. Thus, rock debris from Vesta occasionally reached Earth as meteorites. Chemical analyses of these meteorites have shown that even after Vesta's core formed, further cosmic impacts changed the composition of the asteroid's crust and mantle. "However, this supply of material was much greater during the early phase than afterwards" explains Harry Becker from the Free University of Berlin (FU Berlin), one of the authors of the study. Vesta was struck by at least two very large bodies from the Main Asteroid Belt, as evidenced by two impact basins several hundred kilometres in size at the south pole, which were discovered using a camera developed by DLR and the Max Planck Society on board the Dawn spacecraft.
Earth also had a magma ocean and a blazing hot atmosphere During this time, Earth's first atmosphere was red-hot for many millions of years. Only much later were oceans of water able to form as the hot water vapour cooled and rained down," explains Kai Wunnemann from the Natural History Museum and FU Berlin.
Research Report: "Common feedstocks of late accretion for the terrestrial planets"
Sands of Isle of Wight yield two new Spinosaurus relatives Washington DC (UPI) Sep 29, 2021 Dinosaur bones recovered from the beaches of the Isle of Wight belonged to novel species, close relatives of the giant theropod Spinosaurus. The remains, detailed Wednesday in the journal Scientific Reports, were initially discovered by local fossil-hunters on the beaches of Brighton. The complete excavation was carried out by paleontologists from the Dinosaur Isle Museum over a period of several years. "We realized after the two snouts were found that this would be something rare ... read more
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