From candy floss to rock: study provides new evidence about beginnings of the Solar System
27 March 2011 - IMPERIAL

The earliest rocks in our Solar System were more like candy floss than the hard rock that we know today
To analyse the carbonaceous chondrite sample, the team used an electron back-scatter defraction technique, which fires electrons at the sample. Researchers observe the resulting interference pattern using a microscope to study the structures within. This technique enabled the researchers to study the orientation and position of individual micrometre-sized grain particles that had coalesced around the chondrule. They found that the grains coated the chondrule in a uniform pattern, which they deduced could only occur if this tiny rock was subjected to shocks in space, possibly during these periods of turbulence.The team also defined a new method to quantify the amount of compression that the rock had experienced and deduce the rock’s original fragile structure.Dr Bland adds: “What’s exciting about this approach is that it allows us – for the first time – to quantitatively reconstruct the accretion and impact history of the most primitive solar system materials in great detail. Our work is another step in the process that is helping us to see how rocky planets and moons that make up parts of our Solar System came into being.”In the future, the team will focus further studies on how the earliest asteroids were built.
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