[meteorite-list] No nickel-free iron meteorites

2010-03-27 Thread Paul H.
Walter wrote:

“Hi Rob, 

.nucleosynthesis... 

Ah, one of my favorite words. I try to use it at least once a week :-) 

-Walter 

(give-me-some-hydrogen-atoms-and-I-can-create-any-heavier-
element-up-to-iron) 

Branch”

In that case, some interesting PDF files about nucleosynthesis are:

Origin of the Elements

1. Nuclear Science—A Guide to the Nuclear Science Wall Chart,
Contemporary Physics Education Project (CPEP)

http://www.lbl.gov/abc/wallchart/teachersguide/pdf/Chap10.pdf

2. Origin of the Elements, Physics and Chemistry of the Earth and 
Terrestrial Planets, MIT OpenCourseWare, 2008

http://ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonlyres/Earth--Atmospheric--and-Planetary-Sciences/12-002Fall-2008/7B3B76D2-4AE3-40B8-BE1E-E4C0EFD88EA3/0/MIT12_002f08_lec3_4.pdf

or http://tiny.cc/ironfree1

3. I. The Origin of the Elements, Galaxies, Solar System, and Earth
Past and Present Climate, MIT OpenCourseWare, 2008

http://ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonlyres/Earth--Atmospheric--and-Planetary-Sciences/12-842Fall-2008/F4A17D2E-C8DA-4AE5-8EE0-1186B5063DF1/0/part1_lec1.pdf

or http://tiny.cc/ironfree2

Yours,

Paul H. 

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Re: [meteorite-list] No nickel-free iron meteorites

2010-03-27 Thread cdtucson
Paul,
Great links here. Do they come in an English version??? Quark and anti-quark. 
Haha.
Thanks. Very interesting. 
Carl
--
Carl or Debbie Esparza
Meteoritemax


 Paul H. oxytropidoce...@cox.net wrote: 
 Walter wrote:

“Hi Rob, 

.nucleosynthesis... 

Ah, one of my favorite words. I try to use it at least once a week :-) 

-Walter 

(give-me-some-hydrogen-atoms-and-I-can-create-any-heavier-
element-up-to-iron) 

Branch”

In that case, some interesting PDF files about nucleosynthesis are:

Origin of the Elements

1. Nuclear Science—A Guide to the Nuclear Science Wall Chart,
Contemporary Physics Education Project (CPEP)

http://www.lbl.gov/abc/wallchart/teachersguide/pdf/Chap10.pdf

2. Origin of the Elements, Physics and Chemistry of the Earth and 
Terrestrial Planets, MIT OpenCourseWare, 2008

http://ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonlyres/Earth--Atmospheric--and-Planetary-Sciences/12-002Fall-2008/7B3B76D2-4AE3-40B8-BE1E-E4C0EFD88EA3/0/MIT12_002f08_lec3_4.pdf

or http://tiny.cc/ironfree1

3. I. The Origin of the Elements, Galaxies, Solar System, and Earth
Past and Present Climate, MIT OpenCourseWare, 2008

http://ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonlyres/Earth--Atmospheric--and-Planetary-Sciences/12-842Fall-2008/F4A17D2E-C8DA-4AE5-8EE0-1186B5063DF1/0/part1_lec1.pdf

or http://tiny.cc/ironfree2

Yours,

Paul H. 

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Re: [meteorite-list] No nickel-free iron meteorites

2010-03-27 Thread Walter Branch

Thanks Paul,

Man those are some technical files.  Beyond the understanding of mere 
mortals such as myself.


I would recommend a book by James Kaler, Stars, in which nucleosynthsis is 
touched upon, along with stellar evolution in general.  A readable book for 
the non-technical person (me).  Kaler has written a number of good books on 
well, stars.


-Walter Branch


- Original Message - 
From: Paul H. oxytropidoce...@cox.net

To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Saturday, March 27, 2010 6:38 AM
Subject: [meteorite-list] No nickel-free iron meteorites



Walter wrote:

“Hi Rob,

.nucleosynthesis...

Ah, one of my favorite words. I try to use it at least once a week :-)

-Walter

(give-me-some-hydrogen-atoms-and-I-can-create-any-heavier-
element-up-to-iron)

Branch”

In that case, some interesting PDF files about nucleosynthesis are:

Origin of the Elements

1. Nuclear Science—A Guide to the Nuclear Science Wall Chart,
Contemporary Physics Education Project (CPEP)

http://www.lbl.gov/abc/wallchart/teachersguide/pdf/Chap10.pdf

2. Origin of the Elements, Physics and Chemistry of the Earth and
Terrestrial Planets, MIT OpenCourseWare, 2008

http://ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonlyres/Earth--Atmospheric--and-Planetary-Sciences/12-002Fall-2008/7B3B76D2-4AE3-40B8-BE1E-E4C0EFD88EA3/0/MIT12_002f08_lec3_4.pdf

or http://tiny.cc/ironfree1

3. I. The Origin of the Elements, Galaxies, Solar System, and Earth
Past and Present Climate, MIT OpenCourseWare, 2008

http://ocw.mit.edu/NR/rdonlyres/Earth--Atmospheric--and-Planetary-Sciences/12-842Fall-2008/F4A17D2E-C8DA-4AE5-8EE0-1186B5063DF1/0/part1_lec1.pdf

or http://tiny.cc/ironfree2

Yours,

Paul H.

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[meteorite-list] No nickel-free iron meteorites

2010-03-26 Thread Matson, Robert D.
Hi Carl,

Alan wrote:

 Please note that volumetrically, the amount of low-Ni metallic Fe is
 trivial, far less than 0.1% of a typical chondrite.

You replied:

 .1% is a relative term. Earth may be only a fraction of the size of
 Artares [Antares] but, it is still a pretty big rock.

I don't think you're quite absorbing what Dr. Rubin is saying. There is
no
natural solar system mechanism that can separate iron from nickel in
macroscopic quantities. So if you find a lump of iron on earth that
doesn't
have nickel in it, it originated here. It is not a question of there
being
room for reasonable doubt. It simply cannot happen. The physics of
nucleosynthesis, cosmochemistry, and entropy do not allow it.

Best,
Rob
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Re: [meteorite-list] No nickel-free iron meteorites

2010-03-26 Thread cdtucson
Rob, 
Sorry, What I was trying to say is that .1% of something is more that 0%.  0% 
would be zero. .1% would be something. So, to an atom size person the size of 
these nickel free iron inclusions found in Chondrules would seem rather large. 
Remember, They do exist they are just small in chondrules. 
Image if you were the size of an atom and came up against a piece of iron that 
had been somehow removed from it's host rock (perhaps it crashed onto a hard 
surface here on Earth) . It would appear to be very large relatively speaking. 
remember, you are the size of an Atom. 
That is what the Earth comparison was about. No one is saying nickel-free iron 
does not exist so, I am saying that it could be bigger than that found in a 
small chondrule. Nobody knows how big they are. Until the day comes that we 
find a big one. that is all I meant. They exist on a small scale so it stands 
to reason that they would exist on a smaller and a larger scale as well. I 
don't think we know everything about the size of everything yet. Which leaves 
room for reasonable doubt. Name one real thing that only comes in one size? 
That is how I would argue it if I were a juror based on the information at 
hand. Assuming no DNA evidence exists to the contrary.
I hope that makes more sense. I understand there is no NATURAL way of 
separating these nickel free iron inclusions from their host rock but, 
meteorites do it all the time by collisions with other meteorites. So far we 
have only seen relatively small ones in part because we don't always look. Once 
they fail the quick nickel test they are dead to the world. True story. If you 
tell an investigator you did a nickel test and it was negative you can talk 
until blue in the face. Nobody is still listening. that was my original point. 
We might be missing real meteorites. Maybe Dr. Rubin would not but, screening 
by others happens way before he ever sees them. 
Carl

--
Carl or Debbie Esparza
Meteoritemax


 Matson wrote: 
 Hi Carl,
 
 Alan wrote:
 
  Please note that volumetrically, the amount of low-Ni metallic Fe is
  trivial, far less than 0.1% of a typical chondrite.
 
 You replied:
 
  .1% is a relative term. Earth may be only a fraction of the size of
  Artares [Antares] but, it is still a pretty big rock.
 
 I don't think you're quite absorbing what Dr. Rubin is saying. There is
 no
 natural solar system mechanism that can separate iron from nickel in
 macroscopic quantities. So if you find a lump of iron on earth that
 doesn't
 have nickel in it, it originated here. It is not a question of there
 being
 room for reasonable doubt. It simply cannot happen. The physics of
 nucleosynthesis, cosmochemistry, and entropy do not allow it.
 
 Best,
 Rob
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Re: [meteorite-list] No nickel-free iron meteorites

2010-03-26 Thread Walter Branch

Hi Rob,

...nucleosynthesis...

Ah, one of my favorite words.  I try to use it at least once a week :-)

-Walter 
(give-me-some-hydrogen-atoms-and-I-can-create-any-heavier-element-up-to-iron) 
Branch



- Original Message - 
From: Matson, Robert D. robert.d.mat...@saic.com

To: meteoritelist meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Friday, March 26, 2010 5:31 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] No nickel-free iron meteorites



Hi Carl,

Alan wrote:


Please note that volumetrically, the amount of low-Ni metallic Fe is
trivial, far less than 0.1% of a typical chondrite.


You replied:


.1% is a relative term. Earth may be only a fraction of the size of
Artares [Antares] but, it is still a pretty big rock.


I don't think you're quite absorbing what Dr. Rubin is saying. There is
no
natural solar system mechanism that can separate iron from nickel in
macroscopic quantities. So if you find a lump of iron on earth that
doesn't
have nickel in it, it originated here. It is not a question of there
being
room for reasonable doubt. It simply cannot happen. The physics of
nucleosynthesis, cosmochemistry, and entropy do not allow it.

Best,
Rob
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