[meteorite-list] Chondrule formation mechanism
From: Darren Garrison <cynapse_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sat Oct 21 20:03:42 2006 Message-ID: <otclj2da3thpkaorl4gjg4kuq423qanlsp_at_4ax.com> On Sat, 21 Oct 2006 16:41:48 -0700 (PDT), you wrote: >> Chondrule textures depend on the extent of melting >> of the chondrule precursor- material when cooling >> starts. > >Kind of begs the question - chodrules formed by >collision, which causes melt - consider if one started >from a steady molten state > >>If "viable nuclei" > >I wonder what these "viable nuclei" are? viable cystal >nuclei=Chondrules? How things appear to be (without trying to refer to chemical/minerological details that are beyond my level of knowledge) is that what became chondrules started out as "fluff" that slowly accumulated from the solar nebula, like you mentioned earlier. I imagine something like snowflakes, or dust-bunnies. Something fragile and irregular filled with empty spaces. Then, something (and there is no consensus on what that "something" was) heated those dust-bunnies/snowflakes up to the point where they melted-- and in a microgravity environment surface tension pulled them into little spheres. The "viable nuclei" means parts of that original fluff that didn't fully melt and became seeds for the new minerals to grow on. Received on Sat 21 Oct 2006 08:03:31 PM PDT |
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