Short-Lived Nuclides in Hibonite Grains from Murchison: Evidence for Solar System Evolution
K. K. Marhas,1
J. N. Goswami,1*
A. M. Davis2
Records of now-extinct short-lived nuclides in
meteorites provide information about the formation and evolution of the
solar system. We have found excess 10B that we attribute to
the decay of short-lived 10Be (half-life 1.5 million years)
in hibonite grains from the Murchison meteorite. The grains show no
evidence of decay of two other short-lived nuclides--26Al
(half-life 700,000 years) and 41Ca (half-life 100,000 years)--that may be present in early solar system solids. One plausible
source of the observed 10Be is energetic particle
irradiation of material in the solar nebula. An effective irradiation
dose of ~2 × 1018 protons per square centimeter
with a kinetic energy of
10 megaelectronvolts per atomic mass unit
can explain our measurements. The presence of 10Be, coupled
with the absence of 41Ca and 26Al, may rule out
energetic particle irradiation as the primary source of
41Ca and 26Al present in some early solar
system solids and strengthens the case of a stellar source for
41Ca and 26Al.
1 Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad
380009, India.
2 Enrico Fermi Institute and
Department of the Geophysical Sciences, University of Chicago, Chicago,
IL 60637, USA.
*
To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail:
goswami{at}prl.ernet.in