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Published November 2021 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

³He flux obtained from South Pole air and snow-ice and its connection to interplanetary dust particles

Abstract

Researchers have characterized extraterrestrial (ET) helium, likely carried by interplanetary dust particles (IDPs), in deep-sea sediments spanning more than the last 100 Myr. Here we complement those low resolution and deep time studies by measuring He in modern Antarctic air and recent ice. We analyzed 180 air filter samples collected in 2017 and 2018 at the South Pole and detected ³He above blank levels in 178. The filters collected during the austral springs had elevated ³He in multiple subsamples indicating the presence of many individual IDPs and potentially, a temporal variation in the ET small particle flux. Our calculated mean ³He flux of 1.4 ± 1.2 × 10⁻¹² cc STP cm⁻² ka⁻¹ is the first such measurement from air samples. We also melted, filtered, and analyzed one hundred and forty-one 1 m-long ice sections from a ˜2000-yr-old South Pole core. We detected ³He above blank levels in 139 of the 141 ice core samples and calculated an average flux of 1.2 ± 0.3 × 10⁻¹² cc STP cm⁻² ka⁻¹. Our two flux values are within a factor of two of those calculated from stratospheric IDP concentrations, those previously measured for sections of the GISP2 and Vostok ice cores, and from sediment cores from different locations and ages. The similarity of these flux values over disparate time scales (1–10⁸ yr) and geographic locations (90° S to equator) indicates modest temporal variability and remarkable agreement among diverse IDP archives. These data provide a compelling link from IDPs collected in the stratosphere to those recorded in deep time sedimentary archives.

Additional Information

© 2021 The Meteoritical Society. This article has been contributed to by US Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA. Issue Online: 18 November 2021; Version of Record online: 15 November 2021; Manuscript accepted: 02 October 2021; Manuscript received: 27 May 2021. Collection of the South Pole air filters was funded by NASA's Emerging Worlds program 15-EW15-2-009, with added support from NSF's Antarctic Program. We thank NASA and NSF for their support. As authors, we assert no affiliation or involvement in an organization or entity with a financial or nonfinancial interest in the subject matter or materials discussed in this manuscript. We thank Dr. Hope Ishii and an unknown reviewer for their helpful comments and suggestions. Data Availability Statement: Data available in article supplementary material.

Attached Files

Published - maps.13759.pdf

Supplemental Material - maps13759-sup-0001-appendixa.pdf

Supplemental Material - maps13759-sup-0002-appendixb.pdf

Supplemental Material - maps13759-sup-0003-appendixc.docx

Supplemental Material - maps13759-sup-0004-appendixd.docx

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023