LPL Colloquium: Oxidized Planetary Differentiation

Dr. Samuel Crossley Researcher/Scientist, University of Arizona, Lunar and Planetary Laboratory

When

3:45 to 4:45 p.m., April 16, 2024

Where

Abstract: The familiar layered structure of planetary interiors formed as their initial components melted and segregated to form a core, mantle, and crust. In detail, this process of planetary differentiation was much more complex. Cosmochemical characteristics inherited from different regions of the solar system led to divergent igneous processes that are manifested in the compositional variety of differentiated meteorites.      

In this talk, I will give an overview of how oxidized meteorite parent bodies from the inner solar system melted and diverged from the evolutionary trajectories of other planetary materials. These findings culminate from a coordinated series of investigations utilizing meteoritics, experimental petrology, trace element geochemistry, and remote sensing. Our results demonstrate that melting and differentiation began at lower temperatures via distinct physical pathways due to high concentrations of oxygen and sulfur, leading to the formation of a sulfide core. This process left diagnostic geochemical signatures in the residual mineralogies of differentiated meteorites. Corresponding mineral assemblages are resolvable with remote sensing techniques and dominate the population of olivine-rich asteroids in the Main Belt. Collectively, this implies that sulfide core formation was a common process in oxidized regions of the of the early solar system and carries significant implications for our understanding of planetary differentiation. 

Zoom guidelines and information

As a reminder, please keep yourself muted during the meeting unless you are speaking. If you have an important clarification question, please raise the “blue hand” in the Participant list before asking or you can ask a question in Chat window. For non-urgent questions, please wait until the Q/A time following the presentation.

For those viewing the colloquium in room 308, refreshments will be served in the Kuiper atrium at 3:30 p.m.

***Refreshments are not permitted in the seminar room.***

 

Contacts

Bertha K. Orosco