Impact induced dehydration of serpentine and the evolution of planetary atmospheres
Shock recovery experiments in the 25 to 45 GPa range on antigorite serpentine determine the amount of shock-induced loss of structural water as a function of shock pressure. Infrared absorption spectra of shock recovered samples demonstrate systematic changes in the amount of structural water and molecular, surface adsorbed water. These yield qualitative estimates of shock-induced water loss and demonstrate that a portion of the shock release structural water is readsorbed on interfacial grain surfaces. Determination of the post-shock water content of the shocked samples relates shock-induced water loss and shock pressure. Based on the present results and theoretical predictions, we conclude that shock pressures of from 20 to approx.60 GPa induce incipient to complete water loss, respectively. This result agrees closely with theoretical estimates for total dehydration. The dehydration interval and the activation energies for dehydration in shocked samples decrease systematically with increasing shock pressure as experienced by the sample. We believe the present experiments are applicable to describing dehydration processes of serpentine-like minerals in the accretional environment of the terrestrial planets. We conclude that complete loss of structural water in serpentine could have occurred from accretional impacts of approx.3 km/sec when earth and Venus have grown to about 50% of their final size. Accreting planetesimals, impacting Mars, never reached velocities sufficient for complete dehydration of serpentine. Our results support a model in which an impact generated atmosphere/hydrosphere forms while the earth is accreting.
- Research Organization:
- Seismological Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125
- OSTI ID:
- 6215096
- Journal Information:
- J. Geophys. Res.; (United States), Vol. 87:S1
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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Related Subjects
71 CLASSICAL AND QUANTUM MECHANICS
GENERAL PHYSICS
PLANETARY ATMOSPHERES
PLANETARY EVOLUTION
SERPENTINE
DEHYDRATION
IMPACT SHOCK
ATMOSPHERES
MINERALS
SILICATE MINERALS
SOLAR SYSTEM EVOLUTION
580300* - Mineralogy
Petrology
& Rock Mechanics- (-1989)
640107 - Astrophysics & Cosmology- Planetary Phenomena