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Electron microscope image of an interplanetary dust particle
collected in the stratosphere.
In the Milky Way galaxy, interstellar molecular clouds are the
principal formation sites of organic matter—that is, molecules
based on carbon and hydrogen, where the carbon is arranged in chains
(aliphatic hydrocarbons) or rings (aromatic hydrocarbons). Isotopic
anomalies provide a fingerprint for tracing how abiotic interstellar
organic matter was incorporated into the solar system. Organic molecules
formed in cold, dense interstellar clouds will have isotopic ratios
that differ from those formed in the relative warmth of the solar
system, because the pathways for mass fractionation (which determines
isotopic composition) depend on physical or chemical conditions.
A "heavy" isotope's greater mass results in slightly different
chemical bonding characteristics. These differences become significant
at low temperatures, when the difference in the binding energy between
isotopes exceeds thermal energy. Past measurements of IDPs have
found high levels of deuterium (heavy hydrogen) and nitrogen-15,
consistent with origins in low-temperature interstellar clouds.
Because these anomalies are associated with carbonaceous material,
the lack of similar anomalies in carbon has been a major conundrum.
Using a new technique called NanoSIMS (secondary ion mass spectrometry)
that allows isotopic imaging down to 100 nm, the researchers looked
for carbon and nitrogen isotopes simultaneously. They noted that
one region of the IDP Benavente, about 0.5 by 2 µm2
in size, was strongly enriched in nitrogen-15 and depleted in carbon-13
relative to terrestrial isotopic compositions, the first observation
of correlated nitrogen and carbon isotopic anomalies in an IDP.
Transmission electron microscopy of this material at Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory showed that the region is rich in GEMS (glass
with embedded metal and sulfides) and amorphous carbonaceous material.
Infrared spectra of the carbonaceous material taken at ALS Beamline
1.4.3 showed a prominent absorption feature at a wavelength of 3.4
µm, corresponding to the stretching mode of the carbon–hydrogen
(C-H) bond. The positions of the bands within the feature are consistent
with those of aliphatic hydrocarbons, confirming the organic nature
of the carbonaceous material. Aromatic hydrocarbons are likely to
be present too, but are probably dominated by the strong resonance
of the C-H feature.

Secondary ion mass spectrometer (NanoSIMS) images of
the dust particle, showing a region of nitrogen-15 enrichment (left)
associated with carbon-13 depletion (right).

Infrared spectrum of a section of the dust particle, showing
the C-H stretch feature at 3.4 µm indicative of the presence
of aliphatic hydrocarbons.
In the absence of carbon isotopic anomalies, it was not possible
to determine whether the carbonaceous material was itself presolar
or simply a relatively recent solar-system host substrate for the
anomalous deuterium and nitrogen-15 species commonly found in IDPs.
The observation of correlated carbon and nitrogen anomalies establishes
that IDPs contain heteroatomic organic compounds of presolar interstellar
origin: the material took organic form before solar system existed
and was then incorporated into the IDP. Theoretical models indicate
that low-temperature formation of organic molecules in cold molecular
clouds can produce C and N fractionations through gas-phase ion–molecule
reactions. However, additional studies are required to determine
whether processes exist that can produce both effects in the same
material.
Research conducted by C. Floss and F.J. Stadermann (Washington
University) and J. Bradley, Z.R. Dai, S. Bajt, and G. Graham (Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory).
Research funding: National Aeronautics and Space Administration,
U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences (BES).
Operation of the ALS is supported by BES.
Publication about this research: C. Floss, F.J. Stadermann, J.
Bradley, Z.R. Dai, S. Bajt, and G. Graham, "Carbon and nitrogen
isotopic anomalies in an anhydrous interplanetary dust particle,"
Science 303, 1355 (2004).
ALSNews
Vol. 245, September 29, 2004 |