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Noble gases in presolar diamonds I: Three distinct components and their implications for diamond origins

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TLDR
In this article, three distinct noble gas components are present in diamonds, HL, P3, and P6, each of which is found to consist of five noble gases, and they were measured using stepped pyrolysis.
Abstract
High-purity separates of presolar diamond were prepared from 14 primitive chondrites from 7 compositional groups. Their noble gases were measured using stepped pyrolysis. Three distinct noble gas components are present in diamonds, HL, P3, and P6, each of which is found to consist of five noble gases. P3, released between 200 C and 900 C, has a 'planetary' elemental abundance pattern and roughly 'normal' isotopic ratios. HL, consisting of isotopically anomalous Xe-HL and Kr-H, Ar with high Ar-38/Ar-36, and most of the gas making up Ne-A2 and He-A, is released between 1100 C and 1600 C. HL has 'planetary' elemental ratios, except that it has much more He and Ne than other known 'planetary' components. HL gases are carried in the bulk diamonds, not in some trace phase. P6 has a slightly higher median release temperature than HL and is not cleanly separated from HL by stepped pyrolysis. Our data suggest that P6 has roughly 'normal' isotopic compositions and 'planetary' elemental ratios. Both P3 and P6 seem to be isotopically distinct from P1, the dominant 'planetary' noble-gas component in primitive chondrites. Release characteristics suggest that HL and P6 are sited in different carriers within the diamond fractions, while P3 may be sited near the surfaces of the diamonds. We find no evidence of separability of Xe-H and Xe-L or other isotopic variations in the HL component. However, because approximately 10(exp 10) diamonds are required to measure a Xe composition, a lack of isotopic variability does not constrain diamonds to come from a single source. In fact, the high abundance of diamonds in primitive chondrites and the presence of at least three distinct noble-gas components strongly suggest that diamonds originated in many sources. Relative abundances of noble-gas components in diamonds correlate with degree of thermal processing, indicating that all meteorites sampled essentially the same mixture of diamonds. That mixture was probably inherited from the Sun's parent molecular cloud.

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Phonon-enhanced light–matter interaction at the nanometre scale

TL;DR: It is found that phonon-enhanced near-field coupling is extremely sensitive to chemical and structural composition of polar samples, permitting nanometre-scale analysis of semiconductors and minerals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interstellar Grains in Primitive Meteorites: Diamond, Silicon Carbide, and Graphite

TL;DR: A few parts per million (ppm) of pristine interstellar grains that provide information on nuclear and chemical processes in stars are found in primitive meteorites as mentioned in this paper, and their interstellar origin is proven by highly anomalous isotopic ratios, varying more than 1000-fold for elements such as C and N.
Journal ArticleDOI

Presolar diamond, sic, and graphite in primitive chondrites : abundances as a function of meteorite class and petrologic type

TL;DR: In this article, diamond and SiC were found in unmetamorphosed members of all seven chondrite classes and evidence for graphite was found in Orgued (CI) and LL3.1 chondrites.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stellar nucleosynthesis and the isotopic composition of presolar grains from primitive meteorites

TL;DR: The study of these grains in the laboratory provides new information on stellar evolution, nucleosynthesis, mixing in supernovae, galactic evolution, and the age of the galaxy.
Journal ArticleDOI

STELLAR SAPPHIRES: THE PROPERTIES AND ORIGINS OF PRESOLAR Al 2 O 3 IN METEORITES

TL;DR: In this article, 27 isotopically highly anomalous presolar Al2O3 grains and one presolar MgAl2O4 grain from a separate of the Tieschitz H3.6 ordinary chondrite were identified by an automatic 16O/18O low mass resolution ion-imaging mapping technique in the ion microprobe.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Abundances of the elements: Meteoritic and solar

TL;DR: In this article, new abundance tables have been compiled for C1 chondrites and the solar photosphere and corona, based on a critical review of the literature to mid-1988.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interstellar diamonds in meteorites

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that part of all of the C-delta is primary, not shock-produced, diamond formed by stellar condensation as a metastable phase.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interstellar Grains in Primitive Meteorites: Diamond, Silicon Carbide, and Graphite

TL;DR: A few parts per million (ppm) of pristine interstellar grains that provide information on nuclear and chemical processes in stars are found in primitive meteorites as mentioned in this paper, and their interstellar origin is proven by highly anomalous isotopic ratios, varying more than 1000-fold for elements such as C and N.
Journal ArticleDOI

Noble gases in carbonaceous chondrites

TL;DR: Carbonaceous chondrites noble gases measurement by mass spectroscopy, discussing compositional trends and origins as mentioned in this paper, discussed compositional trend and origins of chondrite noble gases.
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