In situ analysis of residues resulting from laboratory impacts into aluminum 1100 foil: Implications for Stardust crater analyses

The encounter between the Stardust spacecraft and particles from comet 81P/Wild 2 gave impacts at a relative velocity of 6.1 km s−1 and near perpendicular incidence to the collector surface. Such conditions are well within the performance limits of light gas gun laboratory simulations. For this stud...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wozniakiewicz, P., Kearsley, A., Burchell, M., Foster, N., Cole, M., Bland, Phil, Russell, S.
Format: Journal Article
Published: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47498
_version_ 1848757849295945728
author Wozniakiewicz, P.
Kearsley, A.
Burchell, M.
Foster, N.
Cole, M.
Bland, Phil
Russell, S.
author_facet Wozniakiewicz, P.
Kearsley, A.
Burchell, M.
Foster, N.
Cole, M.
Bland, Phil
Russell, S.
author_sort Wozniakiewicz, P.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The encounter between the Stardust spacecraft and particles from comet 81P/Wild 2 gave impacts at a relative velocity of 6.1 km s−1 and near perpendicular incidence to the collector surface. Such conditions are well within the performance limits of light gas gun laboratory simulations. For this study, two series of shots were conducted at the University of Kent, firing magnesium silicates (Mg end-member forsterite, enstatite, diopside and lizardite), followed by a suite of increasingly Ferich olivines (through to Fe end-member fayalite) into Stardust flight-spare foils. Preserved residues were analysed using scanning electron microscopy combined with energy dispersive X-ray analyses (SEM/EDX). X-ray count integrals show that mineral compositions remain distinct from one another after impact, although they do show increased scatter. However, there is a small but systematic increase in Mg relative to Si for all residues when compared to projectile compositions. While some changes in Mg: Si may be due to complex analytical geometries in craters, there appears to be some preferential loss of Si. In practice, EDX analyses in craters on Stardust Al 1100 foil inevitably include contributions from Fe- and Si-rich alloy inclusions, leading to further scattering of element ratios. Such inclusions have complicated Mg: Fe data interpretation. Compositional heterogeneity in the synthetic olivine projectiles also introduces data spread. Nevertheless, even with the preceding caveats, we find that the main groups of mafic silicates can be easily and reliably distinguished in EDX analyses performed in rapid surveys of foil craters, enabling access to a valuable additional collection of cometary materials.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T09:34:38Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-47498
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:34:38Z
publishDate 2009
publisher John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-474982017-09-13T14:13:44Z In situ analysis of residues resulting from laboratory impacts into aluminum 1100 foil: Implications for Stardust crater analyses Wozniakiewicz, P. Kearsley, A. Burchell, M. Foster, N. Cole, M. Bland, Phil Russell, S. The encounter between the Stardust spacecraft and particles from comet 81P/Wild 2 gave impacts at a relative velocity of 6.1 km s−1 and near perpendicular incidence to the collector surface. Such conditions are well within the performance limits of light gas gun laboratory simulations. For this study, two series of shots were conducted at the University of Kent, firing magnesium silicates (Mg end-member forsterite, enstatite, diopside and lizardite), followed by a suite of increasingly Ferich olivines (through to Fe end-member fayalite) into Stardust flight-spare foils. Preserved residues were analysed using scanning electron microscopy combined with energy dispersive X-ray analyses (SEM/EDX). X-ray count integrals show that mineral compositions remain distinct from one another after impact, although they do show increased scatter. However, there is a small but systematic increase in Mg relative to Si for all residues when compared to projectile compositions. While some changes in Mg: Si may be due to complex analytical geometries in craters, there appears to be some preferential loss of Si. In practice, EDX analyses in craters on Stardust Al 1100 foil inevitably include contributions from Fe- and Si-rich alloy inclusions, leading to further scattering of element ratios. Such inclusions have complicated Mg: Fe data interpretation. Compositional heterogeneity in the synthetic olivine projectiles also introduces data spread. Nevertheless, even with the preceding caveats, we find that the main groups of mafic silicates can be easily and reliably distinguished in EDX analyses performed in rapid surveys of foil craters, enabling access to a valuable additional collection of cometary materials. 2009 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47498 10.1111/j.1945-5100.2009.tb01191.x John Wiley & Sons, Inc. unknown
spellingShingle Wozniakiewicz, P.
Kearsley, A.
Burchell, M.
Foster, N.
Cole, M.
Bland, Phil
Russell, S.
In situ analysis of residues resulting from laboratory impacts into aluminum 1100 foil: Implications for Stardust crater analyses
title In situ analysis of residues resulting from laboratory impacts into aluminum 1100 foil: Implications for Stardust crater analyses
title_full In situ analysis of residues resulting from laboratory impacts into aluminum 1100 foil: Implications for Stardust crater analyses
title_fullStr In situ analysis of residues resulting from laboratory impacts into aluminum 1100 foil: Implications for Stardust crater analyses
title_full_unstemmed In situ analysis of residues resulting from laboratory impacts into aluminum 1100 foil: Implications for Stardust crater analyses
title_short In situ analysis of residues resulting from laboratory impacts into aluminum 1100 foil: Implications for Stardust crater analyses
title_sort in situ analysis of residues resulting from laboratory impacts into aluminum 1100 foil: implications for stardust crater analyses
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47498