Fossils of Cyanobacteria in CI1 Carbonaceous Meteorites: Implications to Life on Comets, Europa, and Enceladus
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Appendix A: Scientific Notation
Appendix A: Scientific Notation Since in astronomy we often have to deal with large numbers, writing a lot of zeros is not only cumbersome, but also inefficient and difficult to count. Scientists use the system of scientific notation, where the number of zeros is short handed to a superscript. For example, 10 has one zero and is written as 101 in scientific notation. Similarly, 100 is 102, 100 is 103. So we have: 103 equals a thousand, 106 equals a million, 109 is called a billion (U.S. usage), and 1012 a trillion. Now the U.S. federal government budget is in the trillions of dollars, ordinary people really cannot grasp the magnitude of the number. In the metric system, the prefix kilo- stands for 1,000, e.g., a kilogram. For a million, the prefix mega- is used, e.g. megaton (1,000,000 or 106 ton). A billion hertz (a unit of frequency) is gigahertz, although I have not heard of the use of a giga-meter. More rarely still is the use of tera (1012). For small numbers, the practice is similar. 0.1 is 10À1, 0.01 is 10À2, and 0.001 is 10À3. The prefix of milli- refers to 10À3, e.g. as in millimeter, whereas a micro- second is 10À6 ¼ 0.000001 s. It is now trendy to talk about nano-technology, which refers to solid-state device with sizes on the scale of 10À9 m, or about 10 times the size of an atom. With this kind of shorthand convenience, one can really go overboard. -
Deep Carbon Science
From Crust to Core Carbon plays a fundamental role on Earth. It forms the chemical backbone for all essential organic molecules produced by living organ- isms. Carbon-based fuels supply most of society’s energy, and atmos- pheric carbon dioxide has a huge impact on Earth’s climate. This book provides a complete history of the emergence and development of the new interdisciplinary field of deep carbon science. It traces four cen- turies of history during which the inner workings of the dynamic Earth were discovered, and it documents the extraordinary scientific revolutions that changed our understanding of carbon on Earth for- ever: carbon’s origin in exploding stars; the discovery of the internal heat source driving the Earth’s carbon cycle; and the tectonic revolu- tion. Written with an engaging narrative style and covering the scien- tific endeavors of about 150 pioneers of deep geoscience, this is a fascinating book for students and researchers working in Earth system science and deep carbon research. is a life fellow at St. Edmund’s College, University of Cambridge. For more than 50 years he has passionately engaged in bringing discoveries in astronomy and cosmology to the general public. He is a fellow of the Royal Historical Society, a former vice- president of the Royal Astronomical Society and a fellow of the Geological Society. The International Astronomical Union designated asteroid 4027 as Minor Planet Mitton in recognition of his extensive outreach activity and that of Dr. Jacqueline Mitton. From Crust to Core A Chronicle of Deep Carbon Science University of Cambridge University Printing House, Cambridge CB2 8BS, United Kingdom One Liberty Plaza, 20th Floor, New York, NY 10006, USA 477 Williamstown Road, Port Melbourne, VIC 3207, Australia 314–321, 3rd Floor, Plot 3, Splendor Forum, Jasola District Centre, New Delhi – 110025, India 79 Anson Road, #06–04/06, Singapore 079906 Cambridge University Press is part of the University of Cambridge. -
Organic Matter in Meteorites Department of Inorganic Chemistry, University of Barcelona, Spain
REVIEW ARTICLE INTERNATIONAL MICROBIOLOGY (2004) 7:239-248 www.im.microbios.org Jordi Llorca Organic matter in meteorites Department of Inorganic Chemistry, University of Barcelona, Spain Summary. Some primitive meteorites are carbon-rich objects containing a vari- ety of organic molecules that constitute a valuable record of organic chemical evo- lution in the universe prior to the appearance of microorganisms. Families of com- pounds include hydrocarbons, alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, amino acids, amines, amides, heterocycles, phosphonic acids, sulfonic acids, sugar-relat- ed compounds and poorly defined high-molecular weight macromolecules. A vari- ety of environments are required in order to explain this organic inventory, includ- ing interstellar processes, gas-grain reactions operating in the solar nebula, and hydrothermal alteration of parent bodies. Most likely, substantial amounts of such Received 15 September 2004 organic materials were delivered to the Earth via a late accretion, thereby provid- Accepted 15 October 2004 ing organic compounds important for the emergence of life itself, or that served as a feedstock for further chemical evolution. This review discusses the organic con- Address for correspondence: Departament de Química Inorgànica tent of primitive meteorites and their relevance to the build up of biomolecules. Universitat de Barcelona [Int Microbiol 2004; 7(4):239-248] Martí i Franquès, 1-11 08028 Barcelona, Spain Tel. +34-934021235. Fax +34-934907725 Key words: primitive meteorites · prebiotic chemistry · chemical evolution · E-mail: [email protected] origin of life providing new opportunities for scientific advancement. One Introduction of the most important findings regarding such bodies is that comets and certain types of meteorites contain organic mole- Like a carpentry shop littered with wood shavings after the cules formed in space that may have had a relevant role in the work is done, debris left over from the formation of the Sun origin of the first microorganisms on Earth. -
A Magnetic Susceptibility Database for Stony Meteorites
Direttore Enzo Boschi Comitato di Redazione Cesidio Bianchi Tecnologia Geofisica Rodolfo Console Sismologia Giorgiana De Franceschi Relazioni Sole-Terra Leonardo Sagnotti Geomagnetismo Giancarlo Scalera Geodinamica Ufficio Editoriale Francesca Di Stefano Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia Via di Vigna Murata, 605 00143 Roma Tel. (06) 51860468 Telefax: (06) 51860507 e-mail: [email protected] A MAGNETIC SUSCEPTIBILITY DATABASE FOR STONY METEORITES Pierre Rochette1, Leonardo Sagnotti1, Guy Consolmagno2, Luigi Folco3, Adriana Maras4, Flora Panzarino4, Lauri Pesonen5, Romano Serra6 and Mauri Terho5 1Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Roma, Italy [[email protected]] 2Specola Vaticana, Castel Gandolfo, Italy 3Antarctic [PNRA] Museum of Siena, Siena, Italy 4Università La Sapienza, Roma, Italy 5University of Helsinki, Finland 6“Giorgio Abetti” Museum of San Giovanni in Persiceto, Italy Pierre Rochette et alii: A Magnetic Susceptibility Database for Stony Meteorites 1. Introduction the Museo Nationale dell’Antartide in Siena [Folco and Rastelli, 2000], the University of More than 22,000 different meteorites Roma “la Sapienza” [Cavaretta Maras, 1975], have been catalogued in collections around the the “Giorgio Abetti” Museum in San Giovanni world (as of 1999) of which 95% are stony types Persiceto [Levi-Donati, 1996] and the private [Grady, 2000]. About a thousand new meteorites collection of Matteo Chinelatto. In particular, are added every year, primarily from Antarctic the Antarctic Museum in Siena is the curatorial and hot-desert areas. Thus there is a need for centre for the Antarctic meteorite collection rapid systematic and non-destructive means to (mostly from Frontier Mountain) recovered by characterise this unique sampling of the solar the Italian Programma Nazionale di Ricerche in system materials. -
Magnetite Plaquettes Are Naturally Asymmetric Materials in Meteorites
1 (Revision 2) 2 Magnetite plaquettes are naturally asymmetric materials in meteorites 3 Queenie H. S. Chan1, Michael E. Zolensky1, James E. Martinez2, Akira Tsuchiyama3, and Akira 4 Miyake3 5 1ARES, NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas 77058, USA. 6 2Jacobs Engineering, Houston, Texas 77058, USA. 7 3Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University, Kitashirakawa Oiwake-cho, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 8 606-8502, Japan. 9 10 Correspondence to: Queenie H. S. Chan. Correspondence and requests for materials should be 11 addressed to Q.H.S.C. (Email: [email protected]) 12 13 Abstract 14 Life on Earth shows preference towards the set of organics with particular spatial configurations. 15 Enantiomeric excesses have been observed for α-methyl amino acids in meteorites, which 16 suggests that chiral asymmetry might have an abiotic origin. A possible abiotic mechanism that 17 could produce chiral asymmetry in meteoritic amino acids is their formation under the influence 18 of asymmetric catalysts, as mineral crystallization can produce spatially asymmetric structures. 19 Although magnetite plaquettes have been proposed to be a possible candidate for an asymmetric 20 catalyst, based on the suggestion that they have a spiral structure, a comprehensive description of 21 their morphology and interpretation of the mechanism associated with symmetry-breaking in 22 biomolecules remain elusive. Here we report observations of magnetite plaquettes in 1 23 carbonaceous chondrites (CCs) which were made with scanning electron microscopy and 24 synchrotron X-ray computed microtomography (SXRCT). We obtained the crystal orientation of 25 the plaquettes using electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) analysis. SXRCT permits 26 visualization of the internal features of the plaquettes. -
ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation: WATER in the EARLY SOLAR
ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation: WATER IN THE EARLY SOLAR SYSTEM: INFRARED STUDIES OF AQUEOUSLY ALTERED AND MINIMALLY PROCESSED ASTEROIDS Margaret M. McAdam, Doctor of Philosophy, 2017. Dissertation directed by: Professor Jessica M. Sunshine, Department of Astronomy This thesis investigates connections between low albedo asteroids and carbonaceous chondrite meteorites using spectroscopy. Meteorites and asteroids preserve information about the early solar system including accretion processes and parent body processes active on asteroids at these early times. One process of interest is aqueous alteration. This is the chemical reaction between coaccreted water and silicates producing hydrated minerals. Some carbonaceous chondrites have experienced extensive interactions with water through this process. Since these meteorites and their parent bodies formed close to the beginning of the Solar System, these asteroids and meteorites may provide clues to the distribution, abundance and timing of water in the Solar nebula at these times. Chapter 2 of this thesis investigates the relationships between extensively aqueously altered meteorites and their visible, near and mid-infrared spectral features in a coordinated spectral-mineralogical study. Aqueous alteration is a parent body process where initially accreted anhydrous minerals are converted into hydrated minerals in the presence of coaccreted water. Using samples of meteorites with known bulk properties, it is possible to directly connect changes in mineralogy caused by aqueous alteration with spectral features. Spectral features in the mid-infrared are found to change continuously with increasing amount of hydrated minerals or degree of alteration. Building on this result, the degrees of alteration of asteroids are estimated in a survey of new asteroid data obtained from SOFIA and IRTF as well as archived the Spitzer Space Telescope data. -
Legacy Image
NASA SP17069 NASA Thesaurus Astronomy Vocabulary Scientific and Technical Information Division 1988 National Aeronautics and Space Administration Washington, M= . ' NASA SP-7069 NASA Thesaurus Astronomy Vocabulary A subset of the NASA Thesaurus prepared for the international Astronomical Union Conference July 27-31,1988 This publication was prepared by the NASA Scientific and Technical Information Facility operated for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration by RMS Associates. INTRODUCTION The NASA Thesaurus Astronomy Vocabulary consists of terms used by NASA indexers as descriptors for astronomy-related documents. The terms are presented in a hierarchical format derived from the 1988 edition of the NASA Thesaurus Volume 1 -Hierarchical Listing. Main (postable) terms and non- postable cross references are listed in alphabetical order. READING THE HIERARCHY Each main term is followed by a display of its context within a hierarchy. USE references, UF (used for) references, and SN (scope notes) appear immediately below the main term, followed by GS (generic structure), the hierarchical display of term relationships. The hierarchy is headed by the broadest term within that hierarchy. Terms that are broader in meaning than the main term are listed . above the main term; terms narrower in meaning are listed below the main term. The term itself is in boldface for easy identification. Finally, a list of related terms (RT) from other hierarchies is provided. Within a hierarchy, the number of dots to the left of a term indicates its hierarchical level - the more dots, the lower the level (i.e., the narrower the meaning of the term). For example, the term "ELLIPTICAL GALAXIES" which is preceded by two dots is narrower in meaning than "GALAXIES"; this in turn is narrower than "CELESTIAL BODIES". -
Terrestrial Modification of the Ivuna Meteorite and a Reassessment of the Chemical
Terrestrial modification of the Ivuna meteorite and a reassessment of the chemical composition of the CI type specimen A. J. King1†, K. J. H. Phillips1*, S. Strekopytov2,‡, C. Vita-Finzi1* and S. S. Russell1 1Planetary Materials Group, Department of Earth Sciences, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, U.K. 2Imaging and Analysis Centre, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, U.K. †Corresponding Author: A. J. King ([email protected]), Phone: +44 (0)20 7942 6979 ‡Current Address: Inorganic Analysis, LGC, Queens Road, Teddington, Middlesex, TW11 0LY, U. K. *Scientific Associate The rare CI carbonaceous chondrites are the most aqueously altered and chemically primitive meteorites but due to their porous nature and high abundance of volatile elements are susceptible to terrestrial weathering. The Ivuna meteorite, type specimen for the CI chondrites, is the largest twentieth-century CI fall and probably the CI chondrite least affected by terrestrial alteration that is available for study. The main mass of Ivuna (BM2008 M1) has been stored in a nitrogen atmosphere at least since its arrival at the Natural History Museum (NHM), London, in 2008 (70 years after its fall) and could be considered the most pristine CI chondrite stone. We report the mineralogy, petrography and bulk elemental composition of BM2008 M1 and a second Ivuna stone (BM1996 M4) stored in air within wooden cabinets. We find that both Ivuna stones are breccias consisting of multiple rounded, phyllosilicate-rich clasts that formed through aqueous alteration followed by impact processing. A polished thin section of BM2008 M1 analysed immediately after preparation was found to contain sulphate-bearing veins that 1 formed when primary sulphides reacted with oxygen and atmospheric water. -
Minerals in Meteorites
APPENDIX 1 Minerals in Meteorites Minerals make up the hard parts of our world and the Solar System. They are the building blocks of all rocks and all meteorites. Approximately 4,000 minerals have been identified so far, and of these, ~280 are found in meteorites. In 1802 only three minerals had been identified in meteorites. But beginning in the 1960s when only 40–50 minerals were known in meteorites, the discovery rate greatly increased due to impressive new analytic tools and techniques. In addition, an increasing number of different meteorites with new minerals were being discovered. What is a mineral? The International Mineralogical Association defines a mineral as a chemical element or chemical compound that is normally crystalline and that has been formed as a result of geological process. Earth has an enormously wide range of geologic processes that have allowed nearly all the naturally occurring chemical elements to participate in making minerals. A limited range of processes and some very unearthly processes formed the minerals of meteorites in the earliest history of our solar system. The abundance of chemical elements in the early solar system follows a general pattern: the lighter elements are most abundant, and the heavier elements are least abundant. The miner- als made from these elements follow roughly the same pattern; the most abundant minerals are composed of the lighter elements. Table A.1 shows the 18 most abundant elements in the solar system. It seems amazing that the abundant minerals of meteorites are composed of only eight or so of these elements: oxygen (O), silicon (Si), magnesium (Mg), iron (Fe), aluminum (Al), calcium (Ca), sodium (Na) and potas- sium (K). -
Fossils of Cyanobacteria in CI1 Carbonaceous Meteorites: Implications to Life on Comets, Europa, and Enceladus
See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/245540356 Fossils of Cyanobacteria in CI1 Carbonaceous Meteorites: Implications to Life on Comets, Europa, and Enceladus Article · January 2011 CITATIONS READS 23 288 1 author: Richard Brice Hoover The University of Buckingham 431 PUBLICATIONS 2,729 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: Astrobiology View project Solar Physics View project All content following this page was uploaded by Richard Brice Hoover on 06 November 2018. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. Fossils of Cyanobacteria in CI1 Carbonaceous Meteorites: Implications to Life on Comets, Europa and Enceladus Richard B. Hoover Space Science Office, Mail Code 62, NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, AL 35812 ABSTRACT Environmental (ESEM) and Field Emission Scanning Electron Microscopy (FESEM) investigations of the internal surfaces of the CI1 Carbonaceous Meteorites have yielded images of large complex filaments. The filaments have been observed to be embedded in freshly fractured internal surfaces of the stones. They exhibit recognizable features (e.g., the size and size ranges of the internal cells and their location and arrangement within sheaths) that are diagnostic of known genera and species of filamentous trichomic cyanobacteria and other trichomic prokaryotes (such as filamentous sulfur bacteria). ESEM and FESEM studies of living and fossil cyanobacteria show features -
Top 200 Rajasthan Gk Question
TOP 200 RAJASTHAN GK QUESTION Q1. Man Sagar Lake is situated in which city? (a) Udaipur (b) Jodhpur (c) Jaipur (d) Jaisalmer Q2. The Jal Mahal is situated in the middle of which lake? (a) Man Sagar lake (b) Pichola lake (c) Sambher lake (d) None of these Q3. who constructed Man Saher lake? (a) Jai Singh (b) Sardul Singh (c) Man Singh (d) None of these Q4. Man Sagar Lake was constructed in which year? (a) 1610 (b) 1611 (c) 1612 (d) 1609 Q5. The Albert Hall Museum is situated in? (a) Jaisalmer (b) Jaipur (c) Jodhpur (d) Ajmer Q6. The Laxmi Niwas Palace is a former residential palace which located in Bikaner built by? (a) Ganga Singh (b) Man Singh (c) Jai Singh (d) Sardul Singh 1 www.teachersadda.com | www.sscadda.com | www.bankersadda.com | www.adda247.com Q7. Om Birla is an politician who is the 17th and current Speaker of the Lok Sabha belong from which constituency in Rajasthan? (a) Sri Ganganagar (b) Bikaner (c) Kota (d) None of these Q8. Kota is located along the banks of which river? (a) Luni (b) Ghaghaer (c) Chambal (d) Mahi Q9. Kota became independent in? (a) 1580 (b) 1579 (c) 1578 (d) 1577 Q10. Timan Garh is a historical fort situated in? (a) Karauli (b) Bikaner (c) Dosa (d) Bhilwara Q11. Which folk dance of Rajasthan is characteristic dance of the Bhils? (a) Ghoomar (b) Kalbeliya (c) Fire (d) None of these Q12. The women of which community perform the Kalbelia dance? (a) Gurjar Community (b) Meena Community (c) Kalbelia Community (d) None of these Q13. -
Publications
1 PUBLICATIONS (A. Bischoff; complete list) 1981 1. Bischoff A.: Verhalten von klastischen Feldspäten verschiedener Stoßwellen- metamorphose-Beanspruchungen in der überhitzten Impaktschmelze von Lappajärvi, Finnland. Diploma thesis. Westf. Wilhelms-Universität. Münster (1981). 2. Bischoff A. and Stöffler D.: Thermal metamorphism of feldspar clasts in impact melt rocks from Lappajärvi crater, Finland. Lunar Planet. Sci. XII, 77 - 79, Lunar and Planetary Institute, Houston (1981). 3. Bischoff A. und Stöffler D.: Reaktionen zwischen geschockten Feldspäten und Impaktschmelzen in Gesteinen des Lappajärvi-Kraters, Finnland. 41. Jahrestagung der Deutschen Geophysikalischen Gesellschaft e. V., Heidelberg, 313 (1981). 1982 4. Bischoff A., Keil K., and Stöffler D.: Consolidation of chondrite regolith breccias by grain boundary and localized shock-melting. Meteoritics 17, 183 - 184 (1982) 5. Bischoff A., Stöffler D., and Keil K.: Consolidation and lithification of gas-rich chondrite regolith breccias by grain boundary and localized shock melting. Fortschr. Mineral. 60, 47 - 48 (1982). 1983 6. Bischoff A.: Verfestigung gasreicher chondritischer Regolithbreccien durch Stoßwellen. DFG-Kolloquium "Impaktprozesse auf Planetenoberflächen", Münster (1983). 7. Bischoff A. and Keil K.: Ca-Al-rich chondrules and inclusions in ordinary chondrites. Nature 303, No.5918, 588 - 592 (1983). 8. Bischoff A. and Keil K.: Ca-Al-rich chondrules and inclusions in ordinary chondrites: Evidence for a related genesis of ordinary and carbonaceous chondrites. Lunar Planet. Sci. XIV, 47 - 48, Lunar and Planetary Institute, Houston (1983). 2 9. Bischoff A. and Keil K.: Catalog of Al-rich chondrules, inclusions and fragments in ordinary chondrites. Special Publication No. 22, UNM, Institute of Meteoritics, Albuquerque, 1 - 33 (1983). 10. Bischoff A. and Keil K.: Ca-Al-rich chondrules and inclusions in ordinary chondrites: Evidence for a related genesis of ordinary and carbonaceous chondrites.