Experimentally shock-induced melt veins in basalt: Improving the shock classification of eucrites [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2212.10964


Basaltic rocks occur widely on the terrestrial planets and differentiated asteroids, including the asteroid 4 Vesta. We conducted a shock recovery experiment with decaying compressive pulses on a terrestrial basalt at Chiba Institute of Technology, Japan. The sample recorded a range of pressures, and shock physics modeling was conducted to add a pressure scale to the observed shock features. The shocked sample was examined by optical and electron microscopy, electron back-scattered diffractometry, and Raman spectroscopy. We found that localized melting occurs at a lower pressure (~10 GPa) than previously thought (>20 GPa). The shocked basalt near the epicenter represents shock degree C of a recently proposed classification scheme for basaltic eucrites and, as such, our results provide a pressure scale for the classification scheme. Finally, we estimated the total fraction of the basaltic eucrites classified as shock degree C to be ~15% by assuming the impact velocity distribution onto Vesta.

Read this paper on arXiv…

H. Ono, K. Kurosawa, T. Niihara, et. al.
Thu, 22 Dec 22
25/59

Comments: 17 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, 1 supplementary Information, accepted for publication in Geophysical Research Letters