Origin of Low-26Al/27Al Corundum/Hibonite Inclusions in Meteorites

Author:

Desch Steven J.ORCID,Dunham Emilie T.ORCID,Herbst Ashley K.ORCID,Unterborn Cayman T.ORCID,Sharp Thomas G.ORCID,Bose MaitrayeeORCID,Mane PrajktaORCID,Williams Curtis D.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Most meteoritic calcium-rich, aluminum-rich inclusions formed from a reservoir with 26Al/27Al ≈ 5 × 10−5, but some record lower ( 26 Al / 27 Al ) 0 , demanding they sampled a reservoir without live 26Al. This has been interpreted as evidence for “late injection” of supernova material into our protoplanetary disk. We instead interpret the heterogeneity as chemical, demonstrating that these inclusions are strongly associated with the refractory phases corundum or hibonite. We name them “low-26Al/27Al corundum/hibonite inclusions” (LAACHIs). We present a detailed astrophysical model for LAACHI formation in which they derive their Al from presolar corundum, spinel, or hibonite grains 0.5–2 μm in size with no live 26Al; live 26Al is carried on smaller (<50 nm) presolar chromium spinel grains from recent nearby Wolf–Rayet stars or supernovae. In hot (≈1350–1425 K) regions of the disk, these grains and perovskite grains would be the only survivors. These negatively charged grains would grow to sizes 1–103 μm, even incorporating positively charged perovskite grains, but not the small, negatively charged 26Al-bearing grains. Chemical and isotopic fractionations due to grain charging was a significant process in hot regions of the disk. Our model explains the sizes, compositions, oxygen isotopic signatures, and the large, correlated 48Ca and 50Ti anomalies (if carried by presolar perovskite) of LAACHIs, and especially how they incorporated no 26Al in a solar nebula with uniform, canonical 26Al/27Al. A late injection of supernova material is obviated, although formation of the Sun in a high-mass star-forming region is demanded.

Funder

NASA Nexus for Exoplanetary System Science

Heising-Simons Foundation 51 Peg b Fellowship

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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