[meteorite-list] Ureilite ablation
From: Chris Peterson <clp_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sun, 31 Mar 2013 17:54:40 -0600 Message-ID: <5158CCC0.2060203_at_alumni.caltech.edu> Diamond combusts at a fairly low temperature, less than 1000 K, converting it to amorphous carbon forms. At typical meteoritic ablation temperatures, the graphites convert to gaseous products like CO and CO2. So I'd say that the nanodiamonds found in ureilites have no significant effect on the fusion crust at all. A single diamond entering at meteoritic speeds wouldn't form a fusion crust, because it would combust into gaseous components leaving nothing solid to survive. A diamond a meter or more across (I wish!) might survive to produce meteorites, but I wouldn't expect an actual fusion crust at all, since there would be no melting, only combustion. So I think it would just have an amorphous carbon ash on the outside. Meteor ablation temperatures can be above the melting point of diamond, but that melting can only occur in the absence of oxygen and at much higher pressures than are present around a meteor. Chris ******************************* Chris L Peterson Cloudbait Observatory http://www.cloudbait.com On 3/31/2013 4:56 PM, William Feek wrote: > Hi All, > Do the diamonds in Ureilites undergo ablation, and if so, what does the crust on them look like? > If not, then let me ask this, can someone hypothesize about what they'd expect an ablated diamonds crust to look like? > William Received on Sun 31 Mar 2013 07:54:40 PM PDT |
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