GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017

Paper No. 208-6
Presentation Time: 9:15 AM

RECALESCENCE DURING CRYSTALLIZATION OF STARDUST: RESOLUTION OF THE AMORPHOUS INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM PARADOX


WHITTINGTON, Alan, Department of Geological Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211, SEHLKE, Alexander, Ames Research Center, NASA, Moffett Field, CA 94035 and SPECK, Angela, Physics & Astronomy, University of Missouri Columbia, Columbia, MO 65211, whittingtona@missouri.edu

Dust that coalesces to form planetary systems originates around dying stars, before passing into the interstellar medium (ISM). Historically, observations of broad smooth features in the 10-μm region suggested that dust in circumstellar regions, and in the ISM, was mostly amorphous rather than crystalline. With improved space telescope capabilities, crystalline silicates were discovered in the circumstellar regions around both young and old stars, although they remain undetected in the ISM. Despite intensive study the precise conditions that lead to the formation of crystalline silicates are still unknown, and their absence in the ISM remains problematic.

Here we show that recalescence (spontaneous reheating) of rapidly crystallizing dust can explain the formation and apparent disappearance of crystalline silicates in space. We have documented recalescence in rapidly crystallizing Mg-rich silicate melts, with local heating at the crystallization front exceeding 160 ̊C in some cases. In circumstellar dust shells, amorphous grains with similar compositions condense at temperatures near their glass transition, and if they crystallize, they will recalesce. The higher temperature (T) of newly crystallized dust allows crystalline spectral features to be seen, because flux emitted depends on T4. After cooling to ambient temperature, crystalline spectral features in the ISM are concealed by volumetrically dominant amorphous dust. Our results explain the existence of crystalline silicate pre-solar grains, which are older than the solar system, and have implications for radiative transfer modeling and hydrodynamics of dusty environments, which are sensitive to small variations in optical properties.

Our observations of mm-scale temperature differences up to ~100 ̊C in cooling lava suggest that thermal imaging of basaltic lava flows needs to be conducted with mm-scale spatial resolution (see figure; crucible is ~5mm diameter). Temperatures recorded with low spatial resolution, which average cooler melt and hotter crystals in a single pixel, will systematically overestimate the temperature of the liquid phase. Only the surface of a lava flow is likely to cool quickly enough for recalescence to occur, but this is precisely the part of the lava that is monitored by thermal imaging.