Astronomers tinkering with ice and organics in the lab may have discovered
why comets are encased in a hard, outer crust.
Using an icebox-like instrument nicknamed Himalaya, the researchers show that
fluffy ice on the surface of a comet would crystalize and harden as the comet
heads toward the sun and warms up. As the water-ice crystals form, becoming
denser and more ordered, other molecules containing carbon would be expelled to
the comet's surface. The result is a crunchy comet crust sprinkled with organic
dust.
"A comet is like deep fried ice cream," said Murthy Gudipati of NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, corresponding author of a recent
study appearing in The Journal of Physical Chemistry. "The crust is made of
crystalline ice, while the interior is colder and more porous. The organics are
like a final layer of chocolate on top."
The lead author of the study is Antti Lignell, a postdoctoral scholar at the
California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, who formerly worked with
Gudipati at JPL.
Researchers already knew that comets have soft interiors and seemingly hard
crusts. NASA's Deep Impact and the European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft
both inspected comets up close, finding evidence of soft, porous interiors. Last
November, Rosetta's Philae probe bounced to a landing on the surface of
67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, confirming that comets have a hard surface. The
black, soot-like coats of comets, made up of organic molecules and dust, had
also been seen before by the Deep Impact mission.
But the exact composition of comet crust -- and how it forms -- remains
unclear.
In the new study, researchers turned to labs on Earth to put together a model
of crystallizing comet crust. The experiments began with amorphous, or porous,
ice -- the proposed composition of the chilliest of comets and icy moons. In
this state, water vapor molecules are flash-frozen at extremely cold
temperatures of around 30 Kelvin (minus 243 degrees Celsius, or minus 405
degrees Fahrenheit), sort of like Han Solo in the Star Wars movie "The Empire
Strikes Back." Disorderly states are preserved: Water molecules are haphazardly
mixed with other molecules, such as the organics, and remain frozen in that
state. Amorphous ice is like cotton candy, explains Gudipati: light and fluffy
and filled with pockets of space.
On Earth, all ice is in the crystalline form. It's not cold enough to form
amorphous ice on our planet. Even a handful of loose snow is in the crystalline
form, but contains much smaller ice crystals than those in snowflakes.
Gudipati and Lignell used their Himalaya cryostat instrument to slowly warm
their amorphous ice mixtures from 30 Kelvin to 150 Kelvin (minus 123 degrees
Celsius, or minus 190 degrees Fahrenheit), mimicking conditions a comet would
experience as it journeys toward the sun. The ice had been infused with a type
of organics, called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or PAHs, which are seen
everywhere in deep space.
The results came as a surprise.
"The PAHs stuck together and were expelled from the ice host as it
crystallized. This may be the first observation of molecules clustering together
due to a phase transition of ice, and this certainly has many important
consequences for the chemistry and physics of ice," said Lignell.
With PAHs kicked out of the ice mixtures, the water molecules had room to
link up and form the more tightly packed structures of crystalline ice.
"What we saw in the lab -- a crystalline comet crust with organics on top --
matches what has been suggested from observations in space," said Gudipati. Deep
fried ice cream is really the perfect analogy, because the interior of the
comets should still be very cold and contain the more porous, amorphous
ice."
The composition of comets is important to understanding how they might have
delivered water and organics to our nascent, bubbling-hot Earth. New results
from the Rosetta mission show that asteroids may have been the primary carriers
of life's ingredients; however, the debate is ongoing and comets may have played
a role. For Gudipati, comets are capsules containing clues not only to our
planet's history but to the birth of our entire solar system.
He said, "It's beautiful to think about how far we have come in our
understanding of comets. Future missions designed to bring cold samples of
comets back to Earth could allow us to fully unravel their secrets."
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