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Organic molecules and volatiles in comets
Hikaru Yabuta, Scott A. Sandford and Karen J. Meech
Organic molecules and volatiles in comets (in Comets, Michael E. Zolensky and Monica M. Grady)
Elements (April 2018) 14 (2): 101-106
Organic molecules and volatiles in comets (in Comets, Michael E. Zolensky and Monica M. Grady)
Elements (April 2018) 14 (2): 101-106
Index Terms/Descriptors
- carbon dioxide
- carbon monoxide
- chemical composition
- chemical evolution
- comae
- cometary dust
- comets
- cosmic dust
- cosmochemistry
- dynamics
- early solar system
- gaseous phase
- ice
- interplanetary dust
- irradiation
- isotopes
- laboratory studies
- meteorites
- micrometeorites
- models
- organic compounds
- planetesimals
- protoplanetary disk
- solar nebula
- Stardust Mission
- sublimation
- volatiles
- water
- molecular clouds
- Rosetta Mission
- Churyumov-Gerasimenko Comet
Abstract
Organic molecules and volatiles (e.g. H (sub 2) O, CO, CO (sub 2) ) are the major components of comets. The majority of the organic compounds found within comets were produced by ice irradiation in dense molecular clouds and in the protoplanetary disk prior to comet formation. Comets are essentially repositories of protocometary material. As a result, comets do not show the clear trends in chemical and isotopic compositions that would be expected from our understanding of their formation locations. Rather, comets record chemical evolution in the protoplanetary disk and allow us to unveil the formation history of the organics and volatiles.
ISSN: 1811-5209
Serial Title: Elements
Serial Volume: 14
Serial Issue: 2
Title: Organic molecules and volatiles in comets
Title: Comets
Author(s): Yabuta, HikaruSandford, Scott A.Meech, Karen J.
Author(s): Zolensky, Michael E.
Author(s): Grady, Monica M.
Affiliation: Hiroshima University, Department of Earth and Planetary Systems Science,
Kagamiyama,
Japan
Pages: 101-106
Published: 201804
Text Language: English
Publisher: Mineralogical Society of America and Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland and Mineralogical Association of Canada and Geochemical Society and Clay Minerals Society,
International
References: 26
Accession Number: 2018-057800
Categories: Extraterrestrial geology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 1 table
Secondary Affiliation: NASA, Ames Research Center,
USA,
United StatesUniversity of Hawaii,
USA,
United States
Country of Publication: International
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2018, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, copyright, Mineralogical Society of America. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
Update Code: 201831