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A dual origin for water in carbonaceous asteroids revealed by CM chondrites

Abstract

Carbonaceous asteroids represent the principal source of water in the inner Solar System and might correspond to the main contributors for the delivery of water to Earth. Hydrogen isotopes in water-bearing primitive meteorites, for example carbonaceous chondrites, constitute a unique tool for deciphering the sources of water reservoirs at the time of asteroid formation. However, fine-scale isotopic measurements are required to unravel the effects of parent-body processes on the pre-accretion isotopic distributions. Here, we report in situ micrometre-scale analyses of hydrogen isotopes in six CM-type carbonaceous chondrites, revealing a dominant deuterium-poor water component (δD = −350 ± 40‰) mixed with deuterium-rich organic matter. We suggest that this deuterium-poor water corresponds to a ubiquitous water reservoir in the inner protoplanetary disk. A deuterium-rich water signature has been preserved in the least altered part of the Paris chondrite (δDParis ≥ −69 ± 163‰) in hydrated phases possibly present in the CM rock before alteration. The presence of the deuterium-enriched water signature in Paris might indicate that transfers of ice from the outer to the inner Solar System were significant within the first million years of the history of the Solar System.

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Fig. 1: Measured D/H versus C/H ratios in the matrices of CM chondrites.
Fig. 2: D/H ratios of water and of whole rock for the measured chondrites as a function of the alteration index6,8.
Fig. 3: Whole-rock and matrix D/H ratios of the studied CM chondrites as a function of H2O in weight per cent.

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Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to the French National Museum of Natural History (Paris) and B. Zanda for providing the pieces of the Paris chondrite, to F. Robert for providing the samples of Murchison, Murray and Mighei, to the Japanese Museum of Natural History and S. Yoneda for providing the Sayama sample, and to V. Vinogradoff for providing some of the insoluble organic matter isolated from Paris. H. Naraoka from the Planetary Trace Organic Compounds research center is thanked for the measurement of the whole-rock H2O content and D/H ratio of Sayama. F. Baudin from the French Institut des Sciences de la Terre (ISTeP, UPMCUniversité Paris 06) is thanked for the measurement of the bulk carbon content of Paris. N. Kawasaki, Y. Marrocchi, B. Marty, N. Sakamoto, I. Sugawara, S. Tachibana and A. Williams are warmly thanked for fruitful discussions and for providing assistance that allowed this work to be completed. This work was supported by the grant-in-aid for Scientific Research on Innovative Areas “Evolution of molecules in space from interstellar clouds to proto-planetary nebulae” supported by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science & Technology, Japan (grant number 50754595, L.P.). This is CRPG contribution #2562.

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L.P. designed the study, analysed the samples and wrote the paper. L.R. and H.Y. were involved in the study design and interpretation of the data and also provided input to the manuscript.

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Correspondence to Laurette Piani.

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Piani, L., Yurimoto, H. & Remusat, L. A dual origin for water in carbonaceous asteroids revealed by CM chondrites. Nat Astron 2, 317–323 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-018-0413-4

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