Planetary Mineralogy
The school associated with this volume was inspired by the recent advances in our understanding of the nature and evolution of our Solar System that have come from the missions to study and sample asteroids and comets, and the very successful Mars orbiters and landers. At the same time our horizons have expanded greatly with the discovery of extrasolar protoplanetary disks, planets and planetary systems by space telescopes. The continued success of such telescopic and robotic exploration requires a supply of highly skilled people and so one of the goals of the Glasgow school was to help build a community of early-career planetary scientists and space engineers.
Noble gas chemistry of planetary materials
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Published:January 01, 2015
Abstract
Holding up the right hand side of the periodic table, the noble gases reside in a seemingly inert paradise of full-electron-shell-utopia. Not to be fooled by their outwardly disinterested, yet colourful misdemeanour, they provide a wealth of information about the Solar System and its evolution. In this chapter, the noble gases are introduced and their uses in the planetary sciences summarized.
- age
- alloys
- Ar-40/Ar-36
- argon
- carbides
- chemical properties
- cosmic dust
- cosmic rays
- cosmochemistry
- cosmogenic elements
- dates
- diamond
- exposure age
- geochemistry
- graphite
- He-4/He-3
- helium
- interplanetary dust
- isotope ratios
- isotopes
- Kr-84
- krypton
- meteorites
- micrometeorites
- native elements
- Ne-22/Ne-20
- neon
- noble gases
- planets
- presolar grains
- radioactive isotopes
- solar system
- stable isotopes
- (U-Th)/He
- Xe-129
- Xe-132/Xe-129
- xenon