Sunday, April 27, 2025

Evidence Blasted Into Space: Mystery Why Some Meteorites Look Less Shocked Solved

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Carbon-containing meteorites look like they had less severe impacts than those without carbon because the evidence was blasted into space by gases produced during the impact. The Kobe University discovery not only solves a 30-year-old mystery, but also provides guidelines for a future sampling mission to Ceres.

Knowing what happens when meteorites collide is important for understanding the evolution of the solar system because it provides a window into the solar system's past. And so, planetary scientists as well as astrobiologists analyzing meteorite samples have been puzzled to find that meteorites containing carbon show much less evidence of high-speed impacts than those without. It is as if the ones containing carbon all somehow collided at lower speeds, although it is unclear why that should be. Kobe University astrophysicist KUROSAWA Kosuke says: "I specialize in impact physics and am interested in how the meteorite material changes in response to impacts, something called 'shock metamorphism.' And so I was very interested in this question."

This research was funded by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (grant JP19H00726), the Hyogo Science and Technology Association (grant #6077), and the Science and Technology Facilities Council (grant ST/S000615/1). It was conducted in collaboration with researchers from the Chiba Institute of Technology and Imperial College London. This work was supported by ISAS/JAXA as a collaborative program with the Hypervelocity Impact Facility. Numerical computations and analyses were in part carried out on the general-purpose PC cluster and the analysis servers at Center for Computational Astrophysics, National Astronomical Observatory of Japan.

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