A primordial noble gas component discovered in the Ryugu asteroid and its implications.
Alexander B VerchovskyFeargus A J AbernethyRichard C GreenwoodIan A FranchiMonica M GradyRichard C GreenwoodSimeon J BarberMartin D SuttleMotoo ItoNaotaka TomiokaMasayuki UesugiAkira YamaguchiMakoto KimuraNaoya ImaeNaoki ShiraiTakuji OhigashiMing-Chang LiuKentaro UesugiAiko NakatoKasumi YogataHayato YuzawaYuzuru KaroujiSatoru NakazawaTatsuaki OkadaTakanao SaikiSatoshi TanakaFuyuto TeruiMakoto YoshikawaAkiko MiyazakiMasahiro NishimuraToru YadaMasanao AbeTomohiro UsuiSei'ichiro WatanabeYuichi Tsudanull nullPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Ryugu is the C-type asteroid from which material was brought to Earth by the Hayabusa2 mission. A number of individual grains and fine-grained samples analysed so far for noble gases have indicated that solar wind and planetary (known as P1) noble gases are present in Ryugu samples with concentrations higher than those observed in CIs, suggesting the former to be more primitive compared to the latter. Here we present results of analyses of three fine-grained samples from Ryugu, in one of which Xe concentration is an order of magnitude higher than determined so far in other samples from Ryugu. Isotopically, this Xe resembles P1, but with a much stronger isotopic fractionation relative to solar wind and significantly lower 36 Ar/ 132 Xe ratio than in P1. This previously unknown primordial noble gas component (here termed P7) provides clues to constrain how the solar composition was fractionated to form the planetary components.