Contamination of the asteroid belt by primordial trans-Neptunian objects

被引:237
作者
Levison, Harold F. [1 ,2 ]
Bottke, William F. [1 ,2 ]
Gounelle, Matthieu [3 ,4 ]
Morbidelli, Alessandro [5 ]
Nesvorny, David [1 ,2 ]
Tsiganis, Kleomenis [6 ]
机构
[1] SW Res Inst, Boulder, CO 80302 USA
[2] NASA, Lunar Sci Inst, Ctr Lunar Origin & Evolut, Boulder, CO 80302 USA
[3] CNRS, Lab Mineral & Cosmochim Museum, F-75005 Paris, France
[4] Museum Natl Hist Nat, F-75005 Paris, France
[5] Observ Cote Azur, F-06304 Nice, France
[6] Aristotle Univ Thessaloniki, Dept Phys, Thessaloniki 54006, Greece
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
SIZE DISTRIBUTION; MAIN-BELT; NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS; TROJAN ASTEROIDS; CHAOTIC CAPTURE; ORIGIN; OXYGEN; METEORITES;
D O I
10.1038/nature08094
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The main asteroid belt, which inhabits a relatively narrow annulus similar to 2.1-3.3 AU from the Sun, contains a surprising diversity of objects ranging from primitive ice-rock mixtures to igneous rocks. The standard model used to explain this assumes that most asteroids formed in situ from a primordial disk that experienced radical chemical changes within this zone(1). Here we show that the violent dynamical evolution of the giant-planet orbits required by the so-called Nice model(2-4) leads to the insertion of primitive trans-Neptunian objects into the outer belt. This result implies that the observed diversity of the asteroid belt is not a direct reflection of the intrinsic compositional variation of the proto-planetary disk. The dark captured bodies, composed of organic-rich materials, would have been more susceptible to collisional evolution than typical main-belt asteroids. Their weak nature makes them a prodigious source of micrometeorites-sufficient to explain why most are primitive in composition and are isotopically different from most macroscopic meteorites(5,6).
引用
收藏
页码:364 / 366
页数:3
相关论文
共 29 条
[1]  
BELL JF, 1989, ASTEROIDS II, P921
[2]   Catastrophic disruptions revisited [J].
Benz, W ;
Asphaug, E .
ICARUS, 1999, 142 (01) :5-20
[3]   Dynamical evolution of main belt meteoroids: Numerical simulations incorporating planetary perturbations and Yarkovsky thermal forces [J].
Bottke, WF ;
Rubincam, DP ;
Burns, JA .
ICARUS, 2000, 145 (02) :301-331
[4]   Iron meteorites as remnants of planetesimals formed in the terrestrial planet region [J].
Bottke, WF ;
Nesvorny, D ;
Grimm, RE ;
Morbidelli, A ;
O'Brien, DP .
NATURE, 2006, 439 (7078) :821-824
[5]   Linking the collisional history of the main asteroid belt to its dynamical excitation and depletion [J].
Bottke, WF ;
Durda, DD ;
Nesvorny, D ;
Jedicke, R ;
Morbidelli, A ;
Vokrouhlicky, D ;
Levison, HE .
ICARUS, 2005, 179 (01) :63-94
[6]   Oxygen and asteroids [J].
Burbine, Thomas H. ;
Rivkin, Andrew S. ;
Noble, Sarah K. ;
Mothe-Diniz, Thais ;
Bottke, William F. ;
McCoy, Timothy J. ;
Dyar, M. Darby ;
Thomas, Cristina A. .
OXYGEN IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM, 2008, 68 :273-343
[7]   Phase II of the Small Main-belt Asteroid Spectroscopic Survey - A feature-based taxonomy [J].
Bus, SJ ;
Binzel, RP .
ICARUS, 2002, 158 (01) :146-177
[8]   Search for relations among a sample of 460 asteroids with featureless spectra [J].
Carvano, JM ;
Mothé-Diniz, T ;
Lazzaro, D .
ICARUS, 2003, 161 (02) :356-382
[9]  
CLARK BE, 2003, B AM ASTRON SOC, V35, P955
[10]   OXYGEN ISOTOPES IN METEORITES [J].
CLAYTON, RN .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCES, 1993, 21 :115-149