Purdue University Graduate School
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Formation and evolution of outer solar system components

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posted on 2024-04-22, 01:25 authored by Melissa Diane CashionMelissa Diane Cashion

We present a model describing an impact jetting origin for the formation of chondrules, the mm– scale, igneous components of chondritic meteorites which originated during the first few million years of solar system history. The ubiquity of chondrules in both non-carbonaceous and carbonaceous chondrites suggests their formation persisted throughout the protoplanetary disk, but their formation mechanism is debated and largely unexplored in the outer disk. Using the iSALE2D shock physics code, we generate models of the process of impact jetting during mixed material (dunite and water ice) impacts that mimic accretionary impacts that form giant planet cores. We show that the process of impact jetting provides the conditions necessary to satisfy critical first-order constraints on chondrule characteristics (size, shape, thermal history). We then explore the implications of chondrule formation by impact jetting during the formation of giant planet cores by combining the original results with simulations of giant planet core accretion generated using a Lagrangian Integrator for Planetary Accretion and Dynamics (LIPAD) code.

The second closest Galilean satellite to Jupiter is Europa, an ocean world with an outer ice shell and subsurface water ocean encapsulating its rocky core. The surface of Europa is covered in double ridges. These features are defined by two topographic highs about 100 meters tall, with a central trough between them, which extend for hundreds of kilometers over the surface of the moon. Accurate models for the formation of features as prominent as double ridges will help to further constrain the interior structure and dynamics of the interior of the body. We use analytical and numerical finite element models to show that the incremental growth of an ice wedge within the ice shell can cause deformation matching the observed size and shape of observed double ridges on Europa. These models indicate that the total height and width of the ridges correspond to the depth of the wedge, so that deeper wedges create shorter and broader ridges. We consider different sources for the wedge material and ultimately argue in favor of local sources of liquid water within the ice shell.

Funding

AN INCREMENTAL ICE-WEDGING MODEL FOR EUROPA'S RIDGES

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

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DYNAMICS OF THE EARLY SOLAR SYSTEM AND IMPLICATIONS FOR THE POSSIBLE IMPACT ORIGIN OF CHONDRULES-PURDUE

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

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History

Degree Type

  • Doctor of Philosophy

Department

  • Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences

Campus location

  • West Lafayette

Advisor/Supervisor/Committee Chair

Michelle Thompson

Additional Committee Member 2

Brandon C. Johnson

Additional Committee Member 3

David Minton

Additional Committee Member 4

Marc Caffee

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