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Formation and Formation and differentiation of the differentiation of the Earth Earth Earth’s composition Earth’s composition

Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

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Page 1: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Formation and differentiation Formation and differentiation of the Earthof the Earth

Earth’s compositionEarth’s composition

Page 2: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Nucleosynthesis

« Bethe’s cycle »

Page 3: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Elements stability

Page 4: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Elements abundance

• Lights > Heavies

• Even > Odd

• Abundance peak close to Fe (n=56)

Page 5: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Solar system abundance

Page 6: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

The Orion complex. Left: image of the Orion nebula M42 in the visible domain (Anglo-Australian Telescope). Background: far-IR image (100 microns) of the Orion complex,by the IRAS satellite (1986), covering a very wide area (the angular scale is given). Note the widespread filamentary structure of the ‘‘giant molecular cloud’’. The bright spots are severalstar-forming regions belonging to the same complex, the most active one being M42 (box).

Page 7: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Numerical three-dimensional simulation of star formation in a 10,000 Msun cloud,~600,000 yrs after the initial collapse. The figure is 5 pc on a side. Note thesimilarity of the cloud structure with that of the Orion complex shown in the previous figure.The simulation eventually leads to the formation of ~500 stars.

Page 8: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition
Page 9: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Formation of a planetary nebula-

Page 10: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition
Page 11: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Planetary nebulas

Page 12: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Temperature gradients in the planetary nebula

Page 13: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

A simulation of the runaway growth process for planetary embryos. In a disk ofequal mass planetesimals, two ‘‘seeds’’ (planetesimals of slightly larger size) are embedded. Astime passes, the two seeds grow in mass much faster than the other planetesimals,, becomingplanetary embryos (the size of each dot is proportional to its mass). While the growingplanetary embryos keep quasi-circular orbits, the remaining planetesimals have their eccentricities(and inclinations) excited by the close encounters with the embryos. Notice also thatthe separation between the embryos slowly grows in time

Page 14: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Differenciation of planets

Page 15: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition
Page 16: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Meteorites

Shooting stars

Page 17: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Falls

Ensisheim, France (XVIth century)

Page 18: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Impacts

Page 19: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

… on other planets

Mercury

Moon

Mars

Page 20: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Meteorite types

Stony

Un

differen

ciate

d

~ 80 % Chondrites

Diffe

ren

ciated

~ 5 % Achondrites

Numerous sub-types incl. « Martian »

Stone-iron occasional Pallasites

Iron~15 % Siderites

Page 21: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Chondrites

Page 22: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition
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Chondrite compositions

Page 24: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Achondrites (Eucrite)

Page 25: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Achondrites composition

Page 26: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Siderites

Page 27: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Pallasite

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Page 29: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Continental crust

Ca. 30 km

Page 30: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

aa

bb

Figure 23-15. Progressive mylonitization of a granite. From Shelton (1966). Geology Illustrated. Photos courtesy © John Shelton.

Page 31: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

dd

cc

Figure 23-15. Progressive mylonitization of a granite. From Shelton (1966). Geology Illustrated. Photos courtesy © John Shelton.

Page 32: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Orthogneiss

NB- KSpar is spectacular but not ubiquitous. Plagioclase is more common

Page 33: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Oceanic crust

Page 34: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Gabbro

NB- Oceanic crust gabbro normally has Cpx rather than Opx

Page 35: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Mantle peridotite

Page 36: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Mantle mineralogy

Page 37: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

• Continental crust = Bt + Pg + Qz ± KSpar

• Oceanic crust = Pg + Cpx ± Opx ± Amp

• Mantle = Ol + Opx ± Cpx ± Pg/Sp/Grt

Page 38: Formation and differentiation of the Earth Earth’s composition

Composition of Earth shellsElements wt%

  Crust Mantle Core

  Continental Oceanic Upper Lower Outer Inner

O 41.2 43.7 44.7 43.710--15

 

Si 28 22 21.1 22.5  

Al 14.3 7.5 1.9 1.6    

Fe 4.7 8.5 5.6 9.8 80--85 80

Ca 3.9 7.1 1.4 1.7    

K 2.3 0.33 0.08 0.11    

Na 2.2 1.6 0.15 0.84    

Mg 1.9 7.6 24.7 18.8    

Ti 0.4 1.1 0.12 0.08    

C 0.3          

H 0.2          

Mn 0.07 0.15 0.07 0.33    

Ni         5 20

Cr       0.51