The Press

Earth’s ancient debt of gratitude to Jupiter

-

UNITED STATES: Jupiter may have been a very early bloomer, gaining significan­t mass within the first million years of the solar system’s birth, according to a new analysis of meteorite fragments.

The findings, described in the journal PNAS, could shed light on the early dynamics of gas giant planets in our solar system and beyond – and could help explain Earth’s developmen­t too.

Jupiter, king of the planetary pantheon, is the local heavyweigh­t of our heavens; it tips the scale at about 318 Earth masses, dwarfing even Saturn (coming in at 95 Earths). Jupiter actually holds about 21⁄2 times as much mass as all other seven planets combined – and so its powerful gravitatio­nal tug has profoundly shaped the architectu­re of our solar system.

Knowing exactly when Jupiter first formed, then, will help clarify exactly how Jupiter began to help carve the tumultuous disc of debris around our young star into the stable system we see today. But getting a bead on when that happened has long eluded scientists – though Nasa’s Juno spacecraft is trying to get a handle on that and other questions.

Lead author Thomas Kruijer of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory stumbled across a clue as to Jupiter’s age.

While working at the University of Muenster, the cosmochemi­st and his colleagues noticed there seemed to be a strange pattern among the iron meteorites they were studying: There seemed to be two different groups of meteorites, one of which had a distinct isotopic signature.

Many of the atoms, including iron, molybdenum and tungsten, were heavier versions weighed down by extra neutrons. Those isotopes were probably created during a powerful supernova explosion, and their compositio­n serves as a fingerprin­t of that particular star’s death.

That’s no great surprise; supernovas served as a forge for heavier elements that could not be made in the hearts of living stars. Those heavy elements went on to seed other stars and fold into their planets and asteroids, including the chunks that fell to Earth as meteorites. As scientist Carl Sagan wrote, ‘‘We are made of star-stuff’’.

In the solar system, much of the debris from many different nearby stellar explosions should have mixed together, resulting in a more or less homogeneou­s soup. And they had – except for this one particular group of meteorites that seemed to have held on to its original isotopic fingerprin­t. It was almost as if the two population­s had been separated for a long time and not allowed to mix.

‘‘The only mechanism or way to do this is to have a gas giant in between them,’’ Kruijer said. ‘‘Because only such a body is large enough to separate such large reservoirs.’’

The scientists think Jupiter’s massive body acted like a blockade, keeping the new supernova material from interactin­g with the well mixed debris farther in.

By analysing the tungsten and molybdenum isotopes within the meteorites, they could work back to when that separation between the two population­s may have happened surprising­ly soon after the birth of the solar system about around 4.6 billion years ago.

If they’re right, Jupiter may have grown to about 20 Earth masses in those first 1 million years of the solar system’s formation, Kruijer said. - LA Times

 ?? PHOTO: NASA/REUTERS ?? Jupiter is the heavyweigh­t planet of our heavens, and may have stopped other planets, including Earth, from getting bigger.
PHOTO: NASA/REUTERS Jupiter is the heavyweigh­t planet of our heavens, and may have stopped other planets, including Earth, from getting bigger.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand