Abstract
Chondrite meteorites are samples of primitive asteroidal bodies that have escaped melting and differentiation. The only record of our Solar System’s formative stages comes from the earliest solids preserved in chondrites, namely millimetre- to centimetre-sized calcium-aluminium-rich inclusions (CAIs) and chondrules. These solids formed by transient heating events during the lifetime of the solar protoplanetary disk . Collectively, CAIs and chondrules provide time-sequenced samples allowing us to probe the composition of the disk material that accreted to form planetesimals and planets. Here, we showcase the current state-of-the-art data with respect to the chronology and stable isotopic compositions of individual chondrules from various chondrite groups and discuss how these data can be used to provide novel insights into the thermal and chemical evolution of the solar protoplanetary disk, including mass transport processes.
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6.1 Introduction
Protoplanetary disks are flattened, rotating structures consisting of cool dust and gas surrounding most young low-mass stars, and are a consequence of the requirement to conserve angular momentum during the gravitational collapse of a prestellar core. Astronomical observations suggest that these disks may only exist for a few million years (Evans et al. 2009), a timescale that corresponds to the period where observable mass accretion to the central star occurs (Williams and Cieza 2011). Some material, however, coalesces into centimetre-sized particles that accrete to form larger asteroidal bodies, which represent the building blocks of planetary systems. Thus, the study of these accreting protoplanetary disks provides direct insights into the initial conditions for planet formation .
In the Solar System, a record of the earliest evolutionary stages of the protoplanetary disk is preserved in chondritic meteorites (chondrites), which are fragments of asteroids that avoided melting and differentiation. Based on the bulk chemical and isotopic compositions, mineralogy and petrography, 15 chondrite groups and grouplets comprise three major chondrite classes, carbonaceous (CI, CM, CR, CV, CK, CO, CB, CH), ordinary (H, L, LL), enstatite (EH, EL), as well as K and R, are currently recognised. Most chondrites consist of chondrules, refractory inclusions [Ca,Al-rich inclusions (CAIs) and amoeboid olivine aggregates (AOAs)], and fine-grained matrix (Fig. 6.1a–d). The only exception are CB carbonaceous chondrites , which lack fine-grained matrix and contain anomalously high abundance of Fe,Ni-metal (up to 70 vol%; Fig. 6.1e, f).
In primitive (unmetamorphosed and unaltered) chondrites, fine-grained matrices are complex mixtures of micrometre-sized crystalline magnesian olivine and low-Ca pyroxene, amorphous ferromagnesian silicates, Fe,Ni-metal, sulfides, and organics (Greshake 1997; Abreu and Brearley 2010). Although primitive chondrite matrices are typically considered as volatile-rich thermally unprocessed materials, a significant fraction of this material was probably vaporised and recondensed during high-temperature transient heating events associated with formation of chondrules and refractory inclusions (Scott and Krot 2005).
CAIs represent the oldest Solar System dated solids and, thus, define its age at 4567.3±0.16 Myr (Connelly et al. 2012). It is commonly accepted that CAIs formed in a hot (ambient temperature above ∼ 1300 K) disk region characterised by approximately solar oxygen isotopic composition near the proto-Sun by evaporation, condensation and aggregation processes during a brief time interval that corresponded to high stellar mass accretion rates ( ∼ 10−5 M⊙ year−1) (Krot et al. 2009). Formation of CAIs near the proto-Sun is also indicated by the presence in these objects of the short-lived radioisotope10Be (half-life of ∼ 1.4 Myr) formed by solar energetic particle irradiation (McKeegan et al. 2000). Some CAIs were subsequently melted, most in the same disk region. Following their formation, CAIs were transported to large radial distances where they accreted into chondritic and cometary parent bodies . Most chondrules formed by melting (typically incomplete) of solid precursor material during transient heating events (peak temperature of ∼ 2000 K) of unknown nature in different, relatively cold dust-rich regions throughout the protoplanetary disk during its entire lifetime (Connelly et al. 2012). Therefore, CAIs and chondrules provide time-sequenced samples allowing us to probe the composition of the disk material that accreted to form planetesimals and planets.
Judging by their sheer abundance in chondrites, which in some cases reaches 80% by volume, chondrules must be the product of one of the most energetic processes that operated in the early Solar System. The majority of chondrules formed as melt droplets in high-density regions of the protoplanetary disk and accumulated in the disk mid-plane together with other chondritic components. Chondrules are mainly composed of olivine ((Fe,Mg)2SiO4) and pyroxene ((Fe,Mg)SiO3) minerals, which crystallised within minutes to days between ∼ 1800 and ∼ 1300 K (Scott 2007). Several heat sources have been proposed for the thermal processing of chondrule precursors , including shock waves (Boss and Graham 1993; Connolly and Love 1998; Hood 1998; Connolly et al. 2006), current sheets (Joung et al. 2004), x-winds (Shu et al. 1997), magnetised disk wind (Salmeron and Ireland 2012), and colliding planetesimals (Asphaug et al. 2011; Sanders and Scott 2012). A long-standing paradigm used to constrain chondrule-formation models is the so-called chemical complementarity that apparently exists between chondrules and matrix in individual chondrite groups (Hezel and Palme 2010; Palme et al. 2015; Ebel et al. 2016). In this model, it is proposed that chondrules and matrix are genetically related and formed in highly localised regions of the protoplanetary disk. The chronology of chondrule formation is typically based on the short-lived26Al to26Mg decay system [26Al decays to26Mg with a half-life of 0.705 Myr (Norris et al. 1983)]. Assuming that26Al was uniformly distributed in the protoplanetary disk with the canonical26Al/27Al ratio of ∼ 5×10−5 commonly observed in CAIs, the26Al-26Mg systematics of chondrules suggest that these objects formed > 1 Myr after CAIs and rapidly accreted into chondrite parent bodies together with matrix in discrete events during the lifetime of the disk. In this view, chondrule formation is restricted to the inner regions of the solar protoplanetary disk .
However, a number of recent studies investigating the absolute chronology of chondrule formation as well as the isotopic systematics of individual chondrules from various chondritic meteorites require a reassessment of current thinking with respect to the formation history of chondrules as well as the parent asteroids of chondrite meteorites. For example, the absolute isotopic dates of individual chondrules suggest that the formation of these objects started contemporaneously with the condensation and melting of CAIs and lasted ∼ 3.5 Myr (Connelly et al. 2012), which indicate the existence of multiple generations of chondrules within individual chondrites. Moreover, variability in the titanium and chromium stable isotope compositions of chondrules from individual chondrites suggests that these objects or their precursor was formed in distinct regions of the protoplanetary disk and subsequently transported to the accretion regions of their respective parent bodies (Trinquier et al. 2009; Van Kooten et al. 2016; Olsen et al. 2016). These data are at odds with the traditional view of a short formation history for chondrule population from individual chondrites, the basic concept of chondrule-matrix complementarity as well as the timescales and style of chondrite parent body accretion. In this contribution, we review the current state-of-the-art data with respect to the chronology and stable isotopic compositions of individual chondrules from various chondrite groups and discuss how these data can be used to provide novel insights into the thermal and chemical evolution of the solar protoplanetary disk , including mass transport processes.
6.2 Basic Petrological and Chemical Features of Chondrules
In typical (i.e. not metal-rich) chondrites, most chondrules have porphyritic textures (Figs. 6.1a–d and 6.2a–d) and consist of olivine and/or low-Ca pyroxene phenocrysts surrounded by glassy or microcrystalline mesostasis. Chondrules show large variations in mineral and bulk chemical compositions , allowing us to distinguish magnesian (Fa = atomic ratio Fe/(Fe+Mg)×100 or Fs = atomic ratio Fe/(Fe+Mg+Ca)×100 < 10 mol%; type I), ferroan (Fa or Fs > 10 mol%; type II), and aluminum-rich (bulk Al2O3 > 10 wt%) chondrules. Chondrules with non-porphyritic textures (cryptocrystalline and barred/skeletal olivine) are dominant in CB chondrites, abundant in CH chondrites (Figs. 6.1e, f and 6.2e, f), but relatively rare in other chondrite groups. Chondrules are on average depleted in siderophile (iron-loving), chalcophile (sulfide-loving) and moderately volatile (having condensation temperature < 1000 K) lithophile (silicate-loving) elements compared to whole rock; refractory lithophile elements (Ca, Al, Ti, and rare earth elements (REEs)] are approximately solar (Grossman et al. 1988).
On a typical three-isotope oxygen diagram, δ17O vs. δ18O [δiO = (iO/16Osample ∕ iO/16OSMOW − 1) ×1000, i = 17 or 18], chondrules generally plot along a slope ∼ 1.0 mass-independent fractionation line within ±5 of the terrestrial fractionation line (see Fig. 6.3). In unmetamorphosed chondrites, olivine and low-Ca pyroxene phenocrysts and mesostasis in an individual chondrule have similar oxygen-isotope compositions (Tenner et al. 2015). Porphyritic chondrules are thought to have formed by incomplete melting of solid precursors resulting in preservation of several nuclei in a chondrule melt. In contrast, non-porphyritic chondrules crystallised from melts formed by nearly complete melting of solid precursors and/or by gas-melt condensation.
Porphyritic chondrules commonly contain relict grains that did not crystallise from a host chondrule melt, and, therefore, provide constraints on the nature of chondrule precursor materials and chondrule-forming mechanism(s). Relict grains in chondrules can be distinguished based on their textures, mineralogy, chemical and oxygen isotopic compositions. Based on these characteristics, coarse-grained relict grains ( > 10–100 μm) identified in porphyritic chondrules include CAIs, AOAs, fragments of chondrules of earlier generations (Fig. 6.2a, b), and, possibly fragments of thermally processed planetesimals (see Fig. 1 of Libourel and Krot 2007). Most relict ferromagnesian olivine and pyroxene grains have oxygen-isotope compositions that differ from those of the host chondrule phenocrysts and mesostasis. However, the oxygen-isotope compositions of most relict olivine and pyroxene grains are generally similar to those of typical chondrules suggesting their close genetic relationship; these relict grains are most likely fragments of chondrules of earlier generations (Tenner et al. 2015; Schrader et al. 2014; Jones et al. 2004; Krot et al. 2005b; Russell et al. 2005; Kita et al. 2010; Rudraswami et al. 2011).
Because of high dissolutions rates of olivine in chondrule melts (Soulié et al. 2012), several micron-sized relict grains could have survived only in chondrules that experienced a very small degree of melting. Chondrules in CV, CR and ordinary chondrites are typically surrounded by finer-grained ferromagnesian silicate igneous rims (Krot and Wasson 1995; Krot et al. 2004). Oxidation states of igneous rims (Fa or Fs contents in their olivines and pyroxenes) are generally similar to those of the host chondrules, suggesting formation under similar redox conditions. These rims appear to have formed by melting of relatively fine-grained solids ( < 10 μm) that accreted on the surface of previously solidified chondrules (Krot and Wasson 1995), indicative or repeatable transient heating events experienced by chondrules. Like host chondrules, igneous chondrule rims typically contain relict grains (Nagashima et al. 2015).
6.3 Chronology of Chondrule Formation
6.3.1 U-Corrected Pb-Pb Dating
Of the various radiometric clocks, U-corrected Pb-Pb dating is the only method that provides a high-resolution assumption-free chronology of the first 10 Myr of the Solar System. It is based on two isotopes of U that decay in a chain to stable Pb isotopes, namely235U to207Pb with a half-life of ∼ 0.7 Gyr and238U to206Pb with a half-life of ∼ 4 Gyr. This results in207PbR/206PbR (where R = radiogenic) ratios that correspond to the amount of time passed since the system closed, by Eq. (6.1)
where λ 1 and λ 2 are the decay constants for235U and238U, respectively; and t represents time. The207PbR/206PbR ratio of an inclusion is calculated by extrapolating from an array of measured Pb isotopic values in204Pb/206Pb–207Pb/206Pb space that represent varying mixtures of radiogenic Pb and its initial Pb isotopic composition, which should approximate that of the Solar System’s initial Pb isotope composition (Fig. 6.4). Thus, ages are defined through the internal isochron approach. It is apparent from Eq. (6.1) that knowledge of the238U/235U of an object is required to accurately define its Pb-Pb age. Although traditionally assumed to be 137.88 in all Solar System materials, the238U/235U values of CAIs have been demonstrated to vary by approximately 0.35%, which corresponds to offsets in calculated Pb-Pb ages of up to ∼ 5 Myr (Brennecka et al. 2010). The observation of U isotope variability, attributed to the decay of the short-lived247Cm nuclide (247Cm decays to235U with a half-life of ∼ 15.6 Myr), voided all published Pb-Pb ages for Solar System materials that were based on an assumed238U/235U ratio and made clear the need to have measurements of the U isotopic compositions for all materials dated by the Pb-Pb method. However, more recent work suggests that the238U/235U variability may be limited to the CAI reservoir, where Cm/U fractionation or, alternatively, mass-dependent238U/235U variations can occur via evaporation and/or condensation processes (Connelly et al. 2012; Tissot et al. 2016). This view is supported by the homogeneous238U/235U of chondrules and bulk planetary materials , which is used to define the solar238U/235U value of 137.786 (Connelly et al. 2012; Brennecka et al. 2015).
The majority of chondrules are believed to have formed by melting of disk dust and rapidly (10–1000 K h−1) cooled (Scott 2007). The so-called nebular chondrules are taken here as representing chondrules formed within the protoplanetary disk before dust and gas dissipation. A second group of chondrules apparently formed later by planetary collisions , namely chondrules from the metal- rich CB chondrites . Initial attempts to date nebular chondrules pooled a number of objects that resulted in ages that were 4563.66±0.63 (Amelin et al. 2002) and 4564.32±0.81 Myr (Connelly and Bizzarro 2009) (both ages adjusted for a U isotopic composition of 137.786). These ages can only reflect the average age of the chondrules pooled for these studies. Large chondrules from the Gujba CB chondrite, believed to have formed by a collision between two planetesimals , have been dated as individual inclusions with an average age of 4562.49±0.21 Myr (Bollard et al. 2015).
The only published report on the U-corrected Pb-Pb ages of individual nebular chondrules indicates a protracted formation history, with an age range for five chondrules from 4567.32±0.42 Myr to 4564.71±0.30 Myr (Connelly et al. 2012) (Fig. 6.5). The isochrons for all five chondrules project back to an initial Pb isotopic composition that is close to the presumed primordial isotopic composition of the Solar System, but with some variability interpreted to reflect a complex formation history involving more than one melting event for some chondrule precursors . In all cases, the isochrons projected well above the field for modern terrestrial Pb indicating that this was not the source of non-radiogenic Pb in the fractions used to define the isochrons. This study concluded that the ages derived for the five well-defined isochrons with sensible extrapolations to initial Pb compositions represent the age of the last crystallisation of these chondrules. They ranged in ages from the oldest chondrule that overlaps the brief formation age of CAIs to ∼ 2.6 Myr after. Thus, the first chondrules formed contemporaneously with CAIs and the energy source responsible for the formation of chondrules lasted for at least ∼ 2.6 Myr following condensation of CAIs. A subsequent study of 17 individual chondrules from CR and ordinary chondrites has confirmed the oldest ages of chondrules and extends the age range of nebular chondrules formation to ∼ 3.6 Myr after CAIs (Bollard et al. 2017). The timescales for the melting of disk solids inferred from the Pb-Pb dates is comparable to the ∼ 3 Myr median lifetime of disks around low-mass stars indicated by astronomical observations of young stellar objects within star-forming regions (Evans et al. 2009). Thus, the formation of chondrules may reflect a generic process intrinsically linked to the secular evolution of accretionary disks not unique to our Solar System. If chondrules are indeed an important ingredient promoting the growth of asteroids and planetary embryos, the U-corrected Pb-Pb dates indicate that they existed in the disk over the timescale required to assemble Mars-sized objects.
6.3.2 The26Al-26Mg Decay System
With a half-life of ∼ 705,000 years (Norris et al. 1983), the26Al-to-26Mg decay system is one of the most widely used relative chronometers to understand solid formation in the early Solar System. Indeed, the short-half life of26Al coupled to significant Al/Mg fractionation by condensation and evaporation processes as well as melting and solidification allows for the determination of highly precise relative ages. For example, it has been proposed that the epoch of primary condensation of CAIs from CV chondrites may have been as short as ∼ 4500 years based on the26Al-26Mg system (Larsen et al. 2011; Jacobsen et al. 2008). These objects define the canonical26Al/27Al ratio of ∼ 5×10−5, which is widely thought to reflect the initial26Al abundance of the Solar System. Some CAIs define lower initial26Al/27Al ratios (Fig. 6.6), which may reflect secondary disturbance of the26Al-26Mg system, or alternatively, remelting events within ∼ 300,000 years of CAI condensation (MacPherson et al. 2012). In contrast, chondrules recorded systematically lower initial26Al/27Al ratios. Assuming that the canonical26Al/27Al ratio represents initial abundance of26Al for the Solar System as a whole, it is possible to derive a relative chronology of chondrule formation with respect to the time of condensation of CV CAIs. Using this approach, a number of studies have suggested a time delay of ∼ 1–2 Myr between the formation of CAIs and chondrules, a period commonly referred to as the CAI-chondrule age gap (Krot et al. 2009). Such an age gap, however, is not apparent in the U-corrected Pb-Pb ages of individual chondrules.
Luu et al. (2015) recently suggested that the bulk Al-Mg systematics of a number of chondrules from the non-pristine and aqueously altered Allende carbonaceous chondrites can be used to date the timing of condensation of chondrule precursors. This is based on the observations that a number of chondrules form an array in the Al-Mg diagram that corresponds to an initial26Al/27Al value of 1.2×10−5, which the authors interpret as reflecting the timing of cessation of condensation of chondrule precursors ∼ 1.5 Myr after formation of the Solar System first solids. This conclusion, however, is based on the assumption of26Al homogeneity, which has not been demonstrated by any study and is not constrained by their data. Moreover, the linear relationship is essentially defined by Al-rich chondrules, which are known to contain a recycled CAI component in the Allende meteorite (Krot et al. 2009). Thus, it is unlikely that the array defines a meaningful isochron. We suggest that the acceptable MSWD (mean square weighted deviations) defined by the linear array is a results of the low precision of the Mg-isotope data relative to the state-of-the-art (Bizzarro et al. 2011), which is a factor of 10 better. As such, higher precision data is required to better understand the significance of this array. Finally, we note that the initial26Al/27Al value of 1.2×10−5 defined by the bulk Allende chondrules is comparable to the initial26Al/27Al value of 1.33×10−5 proposed by Schiller et al. (2015a) as the initial26Al abundance for the inner protoplanetary disk . In this interpretation, the bulk Allende chondrule isochron may represent the timing of formation of chondrule precursors contemporaneously with CAI formation.
A number of recent studies have cast serious doubts on the assumption of26Al homogeneity, suggesting instead that initial heterogeneity in the26Al/27Al ratio—perhaps up to 80% of the canonical value—may have existed throughout the inner Solar System (Larsen et al. 2011; Schiller et al. 2015a). In particular, Schiller et al. (2015a) recently provided a detailed comparison of the U-corrected Pb-Pb and internal26Al-26Mg isochron ages for three rapidly cooled angrite meteorites. Their results demonstrate that the26Al-26Mg ages obtained for angrites are systematically younger by ∼ 1.5 Myr relative to their absolute ages, establishing that the angrite parent body accreted from precursor material typified by a reduced initial abundance of26Al relative to the canonical ratio. The three angrites concordantly define an initial26Al/27Al of 1.33−0. 18 +0. 21×10−5 for the precursor of their parent body , which is identical to the estimate of 1.61±0.32×10−5 inferred from the μ26Mg* compositions of young angrites (Larsen et al. 2011). Preliminary reports on the comparison of the U-corrected Pb-Pb and internal26Al-26Mg isochron ages of individual chondrules from various chondrites also yield systematically younger26Al-26Mg ages relative to the Pb-Pb dates (Bizzarro et al. 2014). Collectively, these data support the view that the bulk of the material that accreted to form asteroidal bodies and planetary embryos was characterised by a reduced initial26Al/27Al ratios relative to the canonical value. The reduced inner Solar System initial abundance of26Al relative to that of CAIs has been interpreted as reflecting the thermal processing and unmixing of presolar components with contrasting thermal properties (Trinquier et al. 2009; Paton et al. 2013; Schiller et al. 2015b). In addition, it has been proposed that bodies accreted beyond the orbits of the gas giants contain significant amount of26Al-free, thermally unprocessed molecular cloud matter (Van Kooten et al. 2016). Given the mounting evidence for initial26Al heterogeneity, it appears unlikely that the26Al-26Mg system can provide an accurate chronology of the early Solar System. In this respect, the apparent ∼ 1–2 Myr age gap inferred from the26Al-26Mg system may simply reflect a reduced initial26Al abundance in chondrule precursors, which would bring the chondrule26Al-26Mg age distribution in line with the U-corrected Pb-Pb dates (Bollard et al. 2017).
6.3.3 The182Hf-182W Decay System
The182Hf short-lived radionuclide decays to182W with a half-life of ∼ 9 Myr. Due to the contrasting geochemical behaviour of Hf (lithophile) and W (siderophile), these two elements are fractionated by silicate-metal segregation processes that occurred during the accretion, differentiation and early evolution of asteroidal bodies, planetary embryos and planets (Kleine et al. 2009). In contrast to26Al, which requires late-stage addition of stellar debris to the Sun’s parental molecular cloud , the initial Solar System inventory of182Hf is believed to reflect long-term, steady-state galactic stellar nucleosynthesis before the formation of the protosolar molecular cloud (Wasserburg et al. 2006; Holst et al. 2013). If correct, this supports the view that the182Hf nuclide was homogeneously distributed in the protoplanetary disk at the time of formation of canonical CAIs. However, given the low abundance of W in chondritic components such as chondrules, it is not possible to date individual objects thereby necessitating the pooling of a significant amount of chondrules to obtain sufficient mounts of W. Using this approach, Budde et al. (2016) recently attempted to provide a chronology of the Allende CV chondrite chondrule formation based on the182Hf-182W system. In particular, these authors inferred that the ∼ 3 Myr duration of chondrule formation documented by Connelly et al. (2012) is inconsistent with presumed chemical and isotopic complementary between chondrules and matrix that supports models of local and brief chondrule formation (Hezel and Palme 2010; Palme et al. 2015; Ebel et al. 2016). They hypothesised that the Pb-Pb ages reflect late stage parent body alteration without providing any specific mechanism to explain isochrons as old as CAIs. Instead, they used the short-lived182Hf-182W decay system applied to 100s or 1000s of chondrules as well as matrix and bulk samples in an attempt to obtain the true age range of chondrules. A similar approach was used by Becker et al. (2015). However, using matrix, bulk samples and bulk chondrules to define182Hf-182W isochrons requires independent evidence for a single, closed-system Hf-W fractionation event affecting the matrix and chondrules to fulfil the basic requirement of a meaningful isochron.
Budde et al. (2016) used arguments for complementarity between chondrules and matrix, including their own183W data, to infer a brief formation interval for chondrules and their immediate accretion to form chondrites with cogenetic matrix. Invoking this model to infer coeval fractionation of Hf and W between chondrules and matrix, these authors used these entities and mixtures of them to define a Hf-W array that corresponds to an age of 2.2±0.8 Myr after the formation of CAIs that they accept as the time window of chondrule formation . This overlaps the result of Becker et al. (2015) who defined a chrondrule formation window of − 0. 9±2.8 Myr relative to the formation age of CAIs. However, a recent Mg and Cr isotope study of individual CV chondrules does not support the required complementarity between matrix and chondrules (Olsen et al. 2016). Furthermore, linearity of large multi-chondrule fractions in Hf-W space is predicted if the age distributions of the various populations are similar, even if they are not coeval. In this case, their age would approximate the average age of chondrules if the Hf/W ratio of the matrix is close to the composition of the bulk Solar System. Finally, we note that two earlier studies (Amelin and Krot 2007; Connelly et al. 2008) have investigated the Pb-Pb isotopic dates of Allende chondrule populations to derive average ages for chondrule formation of 1.67±0.9 Myr and 2.85±0.45 Myr after CAI formation [calculated using238U/235U of 137.786 (Connelly et al. 2012)]. These ages are consistent with that reported by Budde et al. (2016). This may indicate that both systems remained closed in each chondrule after their respective final nebular heating event and, therefore, both are capable of returning primary age information about chondrules formation, even in an aqueously altered and metamorphosed meteorite like Allende. However, only the Pb-Pb system is capable of dating individual chondrules to determine the true age range of nebular chondrule formation.
6.4 Mechanism and Style of Asteroidal Accretion
The short time interval inferred for the formation of chondrules within individual chondrite groups based on the26Al-26Mg system can be used to argue for a rapid accretion of chondrite parent bodies. In this model, chondrules formed in high-density regions that were possibly self-gravitating, which resulted in the rapid collapse and accretion of these objects into chondritic parent bodies (Alexander et al. 2008). This implies that chondrule formation and asteroidal accretion are intrinsically linked processes. However, the protracted timescale for the formation of chondrules inferred from the assumption-free U-corrected Pb-Pb dating method (Connelly et al. 2012; Bollard et al. 2017) is inconsistent with this model. Indeed, the ∼ 3 Myr formation interval for chondrules from various chondrite groups indicates prolonged accretion timescales for chondritic parent bodies.
Recent numerical simulations suggest that the formation of asteroidal bodies and planetary embryos may be a two-step process, where first generation planetesimal seeds of ∼ 50 km diameter form rapidly via streaming instabilities (Johansen et al. 2007) followed by the protracted gas-drag-assisted accretion of chondrules during the lifetime of the protoplanetary disk (Johansen et al. 2015). The gas-drag assisted accretion of chondrules onto planetesimals is a process analogous to pebble accretion , which is the accretion of centimetre- to metre-sized particles loosely bound to the gas onto planetesimals seeds (Bitsch et al. 2015). In these simulations, the largest planetesimals of a population with a characteristic radius of ∼ 100 km undergo run-away accretion of chondrules forming Mars-sized planetary embryos within a timescale of ∼ 3–5 Myr. This timescale is in agreement with the timing of formation and differentiation of Mars inferred from182Hf-182W chronology (Dauphas and Pourmand 2011).
A model of continuous asteroidal accretion during the lifetime of the protoplanetary disk has important implications for the thermal evolution of asteroidal bodies given that the accretion process is completed beyond the time when26Al can provide enough energy to induce heating and differentiation (Larsen et al. 2016). Thus, protracted asteroidal accretion predicts the existence of partially differentiated asteroidal bodies, namely onion-shell structured bodies with differentiated interiors consisting of silicate mantles and metallic cores surrounded by unmelted chondritic crusts (Weiss and Elkins-Tanton 2013). Although controversial, this proposal is apparently supported by the discovery of remnant magnetism in chondritic meteorites suggesting the existence of dynamo field (Carporzen et al. 2011), which can only occur through the establishment of a convecting metallic core.
6.5 Accretion Regions of Chondrite Parent Bodies
Large-scale nucleosynthetic isotopic heterogeneity exists among inner Solar System solids, planets, and asteroids, most noticeably for neutron-rich isotopes of the iron-group elements such as48Ca,50Ti,54Cr and62Ni (Birck 2004). In particular, significant54Cr variability has been documented between carbonaceous chondrite groups and meteorites originating from asteroidal bodies believed to have formed in the accretion regions of terrestrial planets such as ordinary and enstatite chondrites and the majority of differentiated meteorites (Fig. 6.7). Bulk carbonaceous chondrites are characterised by excesses in μ54Cr ranging from +57±11 to +156±6 ppm relative to the terrestrial composition (Trinquier et al. 2007). In contrast, enstatite and ordinary chondrites as well as Mars, the Moon and most differentiated meteorites record μ54Cr values that span from the terrestrial composition to deficits of ∼ 100 ppm. Thus, carbonaceous chondrites have apparently sampled, on average, material formed in a distinct reservoir in the terms of their μ54Cr composition compared to the enstatite and ordinary chondrite population. The dichotomy in54Cr composition observed between carbonaceous and non-carbonaceous material is also mirrored by a number of other nuclides, including43Ca,48Ca,46Ti,50Ti,62Ni and88Sr (Paton et al. 2013; Schiller et al. 2015b; Regelous et al. 2008; Trinquier et al. 2009). This variability, which is interpreted as reflecting the selective unmixing of nucleosynthetic components during the earliest stages of Solar System formation (Trinquier et al. 2009; Paton et al. 2013; Schiller et al. 2015b; Van Kooten et al. 2016), provides a means of probing genetic relationships between early formed solids, asteroids and planetary bodies .
It has been suggested that the observed dichotomy in the abundance of the54Cr tracer between carbonaceous and non-carbonaceous chondrites essentially reflects distinct accretion regions of their parent bodies, namely that the carbonaceous material formed beyond the snow line whereas the non-carbonaceous material originated Sunward of the snow line (Larsen et al. 2016; Warren 2011). Accretion of the carbonaceous chondrites beyond the snow line is in accord with the much higher water content of these meteorites (Robert and Epstein 1982; Kerridge 1985) compared to that of enstatite and ordinary chondrites (McNaughton et al. 1981; Robert et al. 1987; Hutson and Ruzicka 2000). Moreover, recent dynamical models for the early evolution of the Solar System suggest that the parent asteroids of carbonaceous chondrites formed between and beyond the accretion regions of the giant planets and were implanted in the asteroid belt following the final outward migration of Jupiter (Walsh et al. 2011).
In the inner Solar System, bulk planetary materials with solar or near-solar27Al/24Mg ratios record positively correlated variability in μ26Mg* and μ54Cr. This correlation is interpreted as reflecting progressive thermal processing of in-falling26Al-rich molecular cloud material, which resulted in preferential loss by sublimation of thermally unstable and isotopically anomalous presolar carriers, producing residual isotopic heterogeneity (Trinquier et al. 2009; Paton et al. 2013; Schiller et al. 2015b; Van Kooten et al. 2016). In this model, the correlated μ26Mg*-μ54Cr array represents the unmixing of distinct dust populations with contrasting thermal properties, namely unmixing of old, galactically inherited homogeneous dust from a young supernovae-derived dust component formed shortly prior to or during the evolution of the giant molecular cloud parental to the protosolar molecular cloud core. We illustrate this concept in Fig. 6.8, which depicts the μ26Mg*-μ54Cr systematics of three reservoirs, namely a bulk Solar System reservoir, the CAI-forming gas and a residual disk solid reservoir. Thermal processing of dust of solar composition occurs at T1, which results in the establishment of two complementary reservoirs, namely the CAI forming gas enriched in26Al and54Cr and a residual disk solid reservoir depleted in26Al and54Cr relative to the bulk solar composition. The timing of the main thermal processing event (T1) is thought to have occurred shortly prior to CAI condensation. Following their establishment, the μ26Mg* isotopic composition of the respective reservoirs evolve according to their initial26Al/27Al to their present-day, measured compositions (T2). Thermal processing at early times thus results in a positively correlated array in the measured μ26Mg* and μ54Cr compositions of bulk planetary materials with solar or near-solar27Al/24Mg ratios.
Van Kooten et al. (2016) recently proposed that the metal-rich carbonaceous chondrites (CB, CH and CR) accreted from material predominately located beyond the orbits of the gas giant planets. This proposal is based on the coupled μ54Cr and μ26Mg* compositions of metal-rich carbonaceous chondrites and their components, which is distinct from bulk inner Solar System objects. In detail, metal-rich carbonaceous chondrites and their components do not plot on the Solar System’s μ54Cr–μ26Mg* correlation line but instead have a unique isotopic signature extending from an inner Solar System composition toward a26Mg*-depleted and54Cr-enriched component (Fig. 6.9). This composition is consistent with that expected for thermally unprocessed primordial molecular cloud material before its pollution by stellar-derived26Al. Moreover, Van Kooten et al. (2016) suggest that the μ54Cr and μ26Mg* compositions of these objects require significant amounts (25–50%) of primordial molecular cloud matter in their precursor material. Given that such high fractions of primordial molecular cloud material are expected to survive only in the outer Solar System, the authors infer that, similarly to cometary bodies, metal-rich carbonaceous chondrites are samples of planetesimals that accreted beyond the orbits of the gas giants. Collectively, the coupled μ54Cr–μ26Mg* systematics of various chondrite groups suggest that their parent bodies accreted in three distinct regions. The parent bodies of ordinary and enstatite chondrites are inferred to have formed Sunward of the snow line whereas the CV, CI and CM carbonaceous chondrites formed in a water-rich region located beyond the snow line, perhaps within the orbits of the gas giant planets. In contrast, metal-rich chondrites apparently formed from a distinct26Al-poor reservoir possibly located beyond the orbit of Saturn where cometary objects accreted. This proposal can be tested by investigating the μ54Cr–μ26Mg* systematics of objects presumed to be of cometary origin such as interplanetary dust particles or ultra-carbonaceous micrometeorites (Busemann et al. 2009; Nesvorný et al. 2010; Duprat et al. 2010).
6.6 Multiplicity of Chondrule-Forming Mechanisms
Based on petrographic and mineralogical observations as well as chemical and oxygen isotopic compositions, it is thought that porphyritic chondrules formed by melting, typically incomplete, of isotopically diverse solid precursors in dust-rich regions (dust/gas of ∼ 100–1000 × solar) of the protoplanetary disk during repeatable and localised transient heating events (Krot and Nagashima 2017; Alexander et al. 2008; Cuzzi and Alexander 2006; Alexander and Ebel 2012). Among the proposed mechanisms of chondrule formation are shock waves related to disk gravitational instability, eccentric planetesimals, and X-ray flares (Desch et al. 2005; Morris et al. 2012), magnetised turbulence in the disk (McNally et al. 2013), collisions between chondritic or differentiated planetesimals (Asphaug et al. 2011; Johnson et al. 2015), and splashing of differentiated planetesimals (Asphaug et al. 2011). Although none of the proposed mechanisms can be completely ruled out, the common presence of relict grains and Fe,Ni-metal in porphyritic chondrules as well as the large age range of chondrules from individual chondrites, including ages indistinguishable from CAIs (Connelly et al. 2012; Bollard et al. 2017), are inconsistent with formation of the majority of porphyritic chondrules by splashing of differentiated bodies.
It is well accepted that the magnesian non-porphyritic chondrules in CB chondrites are thought to have formed in a melt-gas plume generated by a hypervelocity collision between planetesimals ∼ 4.8 Myr after CV CAIs (Bollard et al. 2015; Krot et al. 2005a), with one at least one of the colliding bodies being of differentiated nature (Fedkin et al. 2015; Oulton et al. 2016). In contrast to porphyritic chondrules, the CB chondrules formed during a single-stage event and, therefore, represent single generation objects, including the magnesian cryptocrystalline CB chondrules thought to have formed by condensation as melt droplets from the impact plume (Fedkin et al. 2015). The CH metal-rich carbonaceous chondrites, thought to be genetically related to CB chondrites (Weisberg et al. 1995; Krot et al. 2002), contain multiple generations of chondrules formed by different mechanisms. In detail, the magnesian non-porphyritic chondrules formed in the CB impact plume whereas the ferromagnesian and Al-rich porphyritic chondrules formed by incomplete melting of isotopically diverse precursors from multiple heating events unrelated to the CB impact (Krot et al. 2007; Krot et al. 2017). This clearly emphasises that chondrules formed by distinct mechanisms may occur in individual chondrite groups. In this case, however, the two formation mechanisms result in easily identifiable distinct petrologic features for chondrules. Accepting that shock waves are the dominant heat source for producing chondrules in most chondrite groups, this raises the possibility that the spectrum of petrologic features observed in chondrules is the expression of the numerous potential sources of shock waves that were active during the lifetime of the protoplanetary disk .
The proposal that the combined μ26Mg*–μ54Cr systematics of Solar System objects can be used to track their formation regions predicts that the chondrule-forming process operated at various orbital distances, namely from the inner protoplanetary disk to beyond the accretion regions of the giant planets. Although the high surface densities and high energy environments typical of the inner protoplanetary disk permit chondrule formation through shock-related transient heating events (Connolly et al. 2006), thermal processing of solids in the outer Solar System may require a different source of shocks. For example, the energy required for the thermal processing of dust in the outer Solar System may result from planetary embryos bow shocks or, alternatively, impacts. This emphasises that the energy source required to melt dust resulting in the production of chondrules may be variable in both space and time during the evolution of the protoplanetary disk.
6.7 Tracking Mass Transport and Recycling
Similar to bulk asteroidal and planetary material , the stable isotopic compositions of individual chondrules allow us to determine the formation regions of their precursor material. Based on a limited dataset, Trinquier et al. (2009) identified correlated46Ti and50Ti nucleosynthetic variability in chondrules from the Allende CV3 chondrite, defining both excesses and deficits compared to the terrestrial composition. Moreover, Connelly et al. (2012) documented54Cr variability in individual Allende chondrules as well as chondrules from the NWA 5697 ordinary chondrite. At face value, these results indicate that chondrules formed from isotopically heterogeneous precursor material in different regions of the protoplanetary disk and were then transported to accretion regions of their respective parent bodies.
Accepting that the carbonaceous chondrites did indeed accrete beyond the snow line , a detailed investigation of the μ54Cr compositions of individual carbonaceous chondrite chondrules can provide insights into the transport of material to the accretion region(s) or carbonaceous chondrites. Using this approach, Olsen et al. (2016) recently reported μ54Cr data of 42 individual chondrules from CV and CR chondrites. Their analysis establishes that considerable μ54Cr variability exists amongst individual chondrules, most noticeably for CV chondrites (Fig. 6.10). In detail, CV chondrules record a range μ54Cr compositions that is comparable to that defined by our samples of chondrites, achondrites as well as meteorites from Mars and the Moon. Although it is possible that the μ54Cr heterogeneity observed in CV chondrules reflects the variable incorporation of a54Cr presolar carrier, this interpretation is not consistent with the observed range of compositions. Indeed, given that the scale at which individual chondrules sample disk material is at least 3 orders of magnitude smaller relative to the size of the samples typically used to define the54Cr composition of chondrites and achondrites, greater variability is predicted to be recorded by individual chondrules. The comparable range of54Cr compositions observed for chondrules and bulk samples of chondrites and achondrites points to a similar process imparting the54Cr variation, namely thermal processing of their precursor material. If correct, this establishes that the54Cr values of early Solar System materials can be used to provide a high fidelity record of the formation region of their precursor material.
The range of μ54Cr compositions recorded by CV chondrite chondrules, with both excesses and deficits relative to the terrestrial composition, requires that these objects formed from precursors that originated at various orbital distances, namely from the accretion regions of most differentiated asteroids and terrestrial planets to the formation regions of carbonaceous chondrites. In accord with the abundance of refractory inclusions formed close to the young Sun in CV chondrites (Krot et al. 2009), the occurrence of chondrules with inner Solar System μ54Cr signatures in these chondrites requires efficient lateral outward transport of material during the earliest stages of the evolution of the solar protoplanetary disk. In contrast to CV chondrules, CR chondrules define a much more restricted range of μ54Cr values characterised by compositions found in bulk carbonaceous chondrites. This observation suggests that CR chondrules formed from precursors predominantly formed in the accretion region of their parent body , with little input of material with inner Solar System μ54Cr signatures. This is consistent with the low abundance of CAIs in CR chondrites thereby supporting the view of limited transport of inner Solar System solids to their accretion region. Collectively, the μ54Cr systematics of individual chondrules suggest that variable recycling of thermally processed inner disk solids to the accretion of carbonaceous chondrites may be an important process regulating the compositions of the various carbonaceous chondrite groups.
The coupled μ54Cr and μ26Mg* data for individual chondrules from CV and CR chondrites support the idea that the accretion region of metal-rich chondrites and their components must have been isolated from that of CV chondrites (Van Kooten et al. 2016; Olsen et al. 2016). Indeed, chondrules from CV chondrites show broadly correlated μ54Cr-μ26Mg* variability, similarly to bulk inner Solar System reservoirs (Fig. 6.9). The lack of evidence for admixing of appreciable amounts of thermally unprocessed primordial molecular cloud material in the precursors of CV chondrules suggest that their accretion region(s) was spatially isolated from that of metal-rich chondrites. In other words, inward transport of outer Solar System millimetre-sized solids to the accretion region of CV chondrites appears to have been limited for a significant period of the disk lifetime . A possible mechanism to limit the inward migration of outer Solar System material is the formation of gas giants opening gaps in the protoplanetary disk (Müller and Kley 2013), providing that the gas giants are able to accrete most of the solids attempting to cross the gap. Recent numerical simulations show that rapid formation of gas and ice giants can occur by accretion of centimetre-to-metre-sized particles by the mechanism of pebble accretion (Lambrechts and Johansen 2012). In these models, pebbles are concentrated by aerodynamic drag and gravitationally collapse to form objects of up to 1000 km in diameter; these planetary embryos can then efficiently accrete leftover pebbles and directly form the cores of giant planets . Therefore, the growth of giant cores by pebble accretion provides an efficient means of limiting the influx of material by generating partial disk gaps and pressure bumps outside of their orbits (Lambrechts et al. 2014).
6.8 Outward Mass Transport Mechanisms
The μ54Cr data of individual chondrules from CV and CR chondrites suggest variable amounts of transport and recycling of inner Solar System material to the accretion regions of their respective parent bodies. Two classes of models have been invoked to explain how high temperature refractory material was redistributed throughout the disk to be incorporated into primitive bodies. One class of models are disk models, which explore how the inward transport of mass and angular momentum may result in outward transport in the early evolution of protoplanetary disks . For example, it has been suggested that in viscously evolving disks, turbulence can combine with the large-scale flows of the disk to carry refractory material outward against the inward motions associated with gas drag and accretion thereby providing a means to preserve and diffuse material at larger orbital distances (Cuzzi et al. 2003; Ciesla 2007, 2010). In these models, the transport of material is apparently most efficient in highly turbulent disks, which may limit the efficiency of this mechanism to the earliest stages. Recent studies suggest that the accretion of differentiated planetesimals was initiated within a few 105 years of CAI formation (Schiller et al. 2011; Kruijer et al. 2014; Schiller et al. 2015a; Larsen et al. 2016). Thus, a consequence of outward diffusion via the disk midplane is the incorporation of refractory material within early formed asteroidal and planetary embryos. However, the coupled54Cr and50Ti systematics of Earth, Mars, most differentiated asteroids as well as ordinary and enstatite chondrites (Trinquier et al. 2009) suggest a paucity of CAI material in their precursors, implying that outward diffusive transport through the midplane may not have been the dominant transport mechanism.
The second type of outward transport models is based on the magnetically driven outflows characteristic of young stellar objects. Both observations and simulations show that protostars exhibit powerful outflows of material accelerated to supersonic speeds along the polar axis of the star or as winds from the disk (Bontemps et al. 1996; Romanova et al. 2009; Sheikhnezami et al. 2012). These outflows provide an efficient mechanism for releasing the angular momentum inherited from the accretion process. Solids may be entrained and accelerated in jets and winds resulting in the outward transport of material in ballistic trajectories above the disk (Shu et al. 1996; Hu 2010). Although the role of stellar outflows in the formation of chondritic components such as CAIs and chondrules is uncertain (Desch et al. 2010), disk winds and jets are generic features of protostars and, thus, can provide a potentially efficient mechanism for outward transport and recycling of material during the entire lifetime of the protoplanetary disk (Hansen 2014).
The paucity of CAIs as well as the lack of chondrules with an inner solar system signature in the accretion region of the CR chondrite parent body , inferred to have been beyond the orbits of the gas giants (Van Kooten et al. 2016), suggested little input of thermally processed inner Solar System solids to the outer solar system. Thus, outward mass transport to large orbital distances such as the accretion region of cometary objects may have been only possible during the early, deeply embedded stage of the proto-Sun characterised by powerful high-velocity jets (Bontemps et al. 1996). In contrast, approximately 50% of the chondrules in CV3 chondrites have μ54Cr compositions typical of inner Solar System solids indicating significant admixing of inner Solar System material to the accretion region of the CV parent body . The high abundance of CAI material in CV chondrites relative to CR supports this observation. Thus, outward transport and recycling of inner Solar System material to the outer part of the asteroid belt may have been more protracted and, hence, driven by lower-velocity stellar and disk winds , which may have been active for the entire duration of the accretion phase of the proto-Sun (Reipurth and Bally 2001).
6.9 The Chondrule-Matrix Complementarity
The bulk chemistry of chondrites is defined by the two major components, chondrules and matrix. A number of studies have investigated the apparent chemical relationship between chondrules and matrix in individual chondrite groups (Hezel and Palme 2010; Palme et al. 2015; Ebel et al. 2016). These studies have concluded that the average compositions of chondrules and matrix are typically different for a number of elements in an individual chondrite whereas the bulk composition, which reflects a mixtures of chondrules and matrix, has approximately a solar elemental abundance. This so-called chondrule-matrix complementary has been used to argue for a genetic link between these two components and, therefore, formation from a single reservoir. Given the short residence time of solids in a protoplanetary disk due to gas drag (Weidenschilling 1977), this model, in its simplest expression, predicts that all chondrules from a single chondrite should be in isotopic equilibrium and have the same age. Thus, the chondrule-matrix complementarity requires that chondrule formation and asteroidal accretion are intimately linked. However, the observed μ54Cr variability suggests that chondrules from individual chondrite groups formed from isotopically diverse precursor material in different regions of the protoplanetary disk and were subsequently transported to the accretion regions of their respective parent bodies. This is consistent with the presence of age variability of ∼ 3 Myr between chondrules from individual chondrites (Connelly et al. 2012), which requires transport and/or storage. At face value, these data appear inconsistent with the concept of chondrule-matrix complementary as originally envisaged, namely that all chondrules from an individual chondrites are all genetically related to the coexisting matrix.
Recent models of evolving viscous disks, however, suggest that a complementary relationship between chondrules and dust can be preserved for long time-scales provided that the decoupling between chondrules and gas is limited (Goldberg et al. 2015). In these models, various chondrule populations remained in complementarity such that the bulk contribution from each source is chemically solar and, thus, so is the final mixture. However, these experiments assume that the main transport mechanism of chondrules occurs through outward diffusion via the disk midplane . In disk models where outward transport of material is associated with stellar outflows (Shu et al. 1996; Hu 2010), the coarse-grained dust component (i.e. CAIs and chondrules) is not expected to be efficiently coupled to the gas and, thus, it is unclear how complementary can be preserved. A possibility is the observed chondrule-matrix complementarity is an expression of the generic process of chondrule formation and does not reflect a genetic link. In this view, the matrix comprises a complement related to the chondrule formation process (Alexander 2005) such that the bulk composition of the matrix is shifted from its starting composition and, thus, appears complementary to a chondrule composition. This does not require that the matrix is genetically linked to the chondrules in an individual chondrite but merely that some of it has experienced earlier chondrule formation events. In this view, fractions of the matrix in a particular chondrite may be complementary to chondrule populations in other chondritic meteorites.
6.10 Summary and Perspectives
The U-corrected Pb-Pb ages of individual CAIs and chondrules provide a robust framework to understand the chronology of solid formation in the early Solar System. CAIs formed during a brief time interval of less than ∼ 0.2 Myr, possibly associated with the early stages of the proto-Sun characterised by high mass accretion rates. In contrast, the production of chondrules began contemporaneously with the formation of canonical CAIs and lasted for the entire lifetime of the solar protoplanetary disk (Fig. 6.11). All chondrite groups investigated contain chondrules of multiple generations with a similar age range of ∼ 3 Myr. The bulk compositions of different chondrite parent bodies (CI, CM, CV, CO, OC and EC) record significant stable isotope heterogeneity of nucleosynthetic origin for various elements, which is interpreted as reflecting the selective destruction of isotopically anomalous presolar carriers during progressive thermal processing in the inner disk region . This nucleosynthetic variability indicates that these chondrite parent bodies accreted in spatially distinct disk regions. The level of this heterogeneity is comparable to the range of nucleosynthetic variability among individual chondrules from CV chondrites. Thus, CV chondrules and/or their precursors originated in different parts of the protoplanetary disk and were subsequently transported to the accretion region of the CV parent asteroid. Combined with the protracted formation timescales inferred by the absolute U-corrected Pb-Pb dating method, the observed variability in the stable isotope compositions of chondrules paints a dynamic picture of the early Solar System, where chondrule formation, transport and recycling occur continuously during the lifetime of the protoplanetary disk. Thus, accretion of individual chondrite parent bodies was a continuous process. Given the stable isotope heterogeneity recorded by individual chondrules, the inferred continuous, layered accretion of chondrite parent bodies predicts the existence of time-dependent isotope heterogeneity within these bodies. The growth of sizeable asteroidal bodies and planetary embryos occurred during the lifetime of the protoplanetary disk, possibly promoted by the gas-drag assisted accretion of chondrules onto asteroidal seeds.
The metal-rich chondrites, namely the CR, CH and CB chondrites, formed from precursor material that has largely escaped the thermal processing recorded by the inner Solar System bodies . The metal-rich chondrites and their chondrules appear to have incorporated appreciable amounts of thermally unprocessed primordial molecular cloud material, suggesting formation in the outer part of the Solar System, beyond the orbits the gas giant planets. Thus, thermal processing of solids, including chondrule formation was not restricted to the inner disk regions but also occurred in the outer Solar System. However, the mechanism and efficiency of the thermal processing of solids at large orbital distances are poorly understood.
The stable isotope compositions of the inner and outer Solar System materials are distinct, implying limited mixing of these two reservoirs. An efficient mechanism to limit the inward transport of outer disk solids to the inner Solar System is the formation of gas giants opening gaps in the disk. Collectively, these data suggest that different chondrule-forming mechanisms may have operated at distinct times and/or regions of the protoplanetary disk. Indeed, CH chondrites contain chondrules formed by different mechanisms, including gas-melt impact plume produced chondrules as well as chondrules formed by incomplete melting during transient heating events.
Outward transport of solids could have occurred by a variety of time-dependent processes, including turbulent diffusion and stellar outflows. The outward mass transport to large orbital distances such as the accretion region of cometary objects may have been only possible during the early, deeply embedded stage of the proto-Sun characterised by powerful high-velocity jets. The paucity of CAIs in the accretion regions of inner protoplanetary disk bodies relative to the accretion regions of carbonaceous chondrites and the presence of CAI-like objects in the Jupiter family comet 81P/Wild 2 suggest that refractory inclusions were radially transported above the midplane, possibly entrained and accelerated in stellar outflows such as jets and disk winds. In contrast, outward transport and recycling of inner Solar System material to the outer part of the asteroid belt appear to be more protracted and, hence, driven by lower-velocity stellar and disk winds, which may have been active for the entire duration of the accretion phase of the proto-Sun.
The scenario presented here for the protoplantary disk evolution can be tested through key isotope measurements of various meteoritic solids. The continuous layered accretion of chondrite parent bodies can be tested by high-precision bulk Mg and Cr isotope measurements of chondrites thought to have originated at different depths of the same parent asteroid such as ordinary chondrites of petrologic types 3-6 that experienced increasingly higher peak metamorphic temperatures (300-900∘C). A better understanding of the timing and tempo of chondrule formation and, by extension, the nature of the chondrule forming mechanisms that may have operated at different times can be evaluated by acquiring a statistically significant dataset of U-corrected Pb-Pb ages of individual chondrules from various chondrite groups. The proposal of a reduced inner Solar System initial abundance of26Al relative to the canonical ratio observed in CAIs can be tested by combined Al-Mg and U-corrected Pb-Pb ages of individual chondrules from primitive chondrites. The hypothesis that metal-rich chondrites accreted in an26Al-poor region of the outer Solar System can be verified by investigating the μ54Cr–μ26Mg* systematics of objects presumed to be of cometary origin such as interplanetary dust particles or ultra-carbonaceous micrometeorites. Finally, the roles of stellar outflows in the outward transport of solids can be evaluated by both high-resolution astronomical observations of young disks and realistic numerical simulations of star-formation and evolving protoplanetary disks .
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Acknowledgements
This work was funded by grants from the Danish National Research Foundation (DNRF97) and from the European Research Council (ERC Consolidator Grant Agreement 616027-STARDUST2ASTEROIDS) to MB. We thank the referee for comments, which have improved our chapter.
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Bizzarro, M., Connelly, J.N., Krot, A.N. (2017). Chondrules: Ubiquitous Chondritic Solids Tracking the Evolution of the Solar Protoplanetary Disk. In: Pessah, M., Gressel, O. (eds) Formation, Evolution, and Dynamics of Young Solar Systems. Astrophysics and Space Science Library, vol 445. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-60609-5_6
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