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Published July 2019 | Published
Journal Article Open

Paleomagnetic evidence for a partially differentiated ordinary chondrite parent asteroid

Abstract

The textures and accretion ages of chondrites have been used to argue that their parent asteroids never differentiated. Without a core, undifferentiated planetesimals could not have generated magnetic fields through dynamo activity, so chondrites are not expected to have experienced such fields. However, the magnetic remanence carried by the CV chondrites is consistent with dynamo‐generated fields, hinting that partially differentiated asteroids consisting of an unmelted crust atop a differentiated interior may exist. Here, we test this hypothesis by applying synchrotron X‐ray microscopy to metallic veins in the slowly cooled H6 chondrite Portales Valley. The magnetic remanence carried by nanostructures in these veins indicates that this meteorite recorded a magnetic field over a period of tens to hundreds of years at ∼100 Myr after solar system formation. These properties are inconsistent with external field sources such as the nebula, solar wind, or impacts, but are consistent with dynamo‐generated fields, indicating that the H chondrite parent body contained an advecting metallic core and was therefore partially differentiated. We calculate the thermal evolution of the chondritic portions of partially differentiated asteroids that form through incremental accretion across 105 to 106 years, finding this can agree with the measured ages and cooling rates of multiple H chondrites. We also predict that the cores of these bodies could have been partially liquid and feasibly generating a dynamo at 100 Myr after solar system formation. These observations contribute to a growing body of evidence supporting a spectrum of internal differentiation within some asteroids with primitive surfaces.

Additional Information

© 2019 American Geophysical Union. Received 21 FEB 2019; Accepted 12 APR 2019; Accepted article online 19 JUN 2019; Published online 18 JUL 2019. We thank C. Nichols, R. Harrison, and E. Lima for assistance and helpful discussions. J. A. thanks the Caltech Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship program. J. F. J. B. and B. P. W. thank the NASA Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institute grant NNA14AB01A, the NASA Solar System Workings Program (grant NNX15AL62G), and Thomas F. Peterson, Jr. for support. J. F. J. B would also like to thank St. John's College, University of Cambridge for funding. The Advanced Light Source is supported by the Director, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences of the U.S. D.O.E. under contract DE‐AC02‐05CH11231. We would like to thank the Natural History Museum, London, and the U.S. National Museum for loaning us meteorites. The data in this paper can be found on the MagIC database (https://www2.earthref.org/MagIC). Author Contributions: Conceptualization: J. F. J. Bryson, B. P. Weiss. Data curation: J. F. J. Bryson. Funding Acquisition: B. P. Weiss. Methodology: J. F. J. Bryson. Writing - Original Draft: J. F. J. Bryson, B. P. Weiss, F. Nimmo. Formal Analysis: J. F. J. Bryson, B. Getzin, J. N. H. Abrahams, F. Nimmo. Investigation: J. F. J. Bryson, B. Getzin, J. N. H. Abrahams, F. Nimmo. Project Administration: B. P. Weiss.

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023