Nucleosynthetic Isotope Variations of Siderophile and Chalcophile Elements in the Solar System
Author(s) -
Tetsuya Yokoyama,
R. J. Walker
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
reviews in mineralogy and geochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.63
H-Index - 119
eISSN - 1943-2666
pISSN - 1529-6466
DOI - 10.2138/rmg.2016.81.03
Subject(s) - isotope , astrobiology , radiochemistry , chemistry , physics , nuclear physics
Numerous investigations have been devoted to understanding how the materials that contributed to the Solar System formed, were incorporated into the precursor molecular cloud and the protoplanetary disk, and ultimately evolved into the building blocks of planetesimals and planets. Chemical and isotopic analyses of extraterrestrial materials have played a central role in decoding the signatures of individual processes that led to their formation. Among the elements studied, the siderophile and chalcophile elements are crucial for considering a range of formational and evolutionary processes. Consequently, over the past 60 years, considerable effort has been focused on the development of abundance and isotopic analyses of these elements in terrestrial and extraterrestrial materials (e.g., Shirey and Walker 1995; Birck et al. 1997; Reisberg and Meisel 2002; Meisel and Horan 2016, this volume).In this review, we consider nucleosynthetic isotopic variability of siderophile and chalcophile elements in meteorites. Chapter 4 provides a review for siderophile and chalcophile elements in planetary materials in general (Day et al. 2016, this volume). In many cases, such variability is denoted as an “isotopic anomaly”; however, the term can be ambiguous because several pre- and post- Solar System formation processes can lead to variability of isotopic compositions as recorded in meteorites. Here we strictly define the term “isotopic anomaly” as referring to an isotopic deviation from the terrestrial composition resulting from the incorporation of varying proportions of elements with diverse nucleosynthetic origins into a meteorite component or parent body. The term will not be used here to refer to isotopic variations that result from mass-dependent isotopic fractionation, radioactive decay in the Solar System, or spallation effects.Based on astronomical observations and physical modelling, the formation of the Solar System has generally been thought to have initiated by the collapse of a dense molecular cloud …
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