Shock-Wave Experiment with the Chelyabinsk LL5 Meteorite: Experimental Parameters and the Texture of the Shock-Affected Material


Cite item

Full Text

Open Access Open Access
Restricted Access Access granted
Restricted Access Subscription Access

Abstract

A spherical geometry shock experiment with the light-colored lithology material of the Chelyabinsk LL5 ordinary chondrite was carried out. The material was affected by shock and thermal metamorphism whose grade ranged from initial stage S3-4 to complete melting. The temperature and pressure were estimated at >2000°С and >90 GPa. The textural shock effects were studied by optical and electron microscopy. A single experimental impact has produced the whole the range of shock pressures and temperatures and, correspondingly, four zones identified by petrographic analysis: (1) a melt zone, (2) a zone of melting silicates, (3) a black ring zone, and (4) a zone of weakly shocked initial material. The following textural features of the material were identified: displacement of the metal and troilite phases from the central melt zone; the development of a zone of mixed lithology (light-colored fragments in silicate melt); the origin of a dark-colored lithology ring; and the generation of radiating shock veinlets. The experimental sample shows four textural zones that correspond to the different lithology types of the Chelyabinsk LL5 meteorite found in fragments of the meteoritic shower in the collection at the Ural Federal University. Our results prove that shock wave loading experiment can be successfully applied in modeling of space shocks and can be used to experimentally model processes at the small bodies of the solar system.

About the authors

E. V. Petrova

Ural Federal University, Institute of Physics and Technology

Author for correspondence.
Email: evgeniya.petrova@urfu.ru
Russian Federation, Yekaterinburg, 620002

V. I. Grokhovsky

Ural Federal University, Institute of Physics and Technology

Email: evgeniya.petrova@urfu.ru
Russian Federation, Yekaterinburg, 620002

T. Kohout

University of Helsinki, Faculty of Science

Email: evgeniya.petrova@urfu.ru
Finland, Helsinki, 00014PL64

R. F. Muftakhetdinova

Ural Federal University, Institute of Physics and Technology

Email: evgeniya.petrova@urfu.ru
Russian Federation, Yekaterinburg, 620002

G. A. Yakovlev

Ural Federal University, Institute of Physics and Technology

Email: evgeniya.petrova@urfu.ru
Russian Federation, Yekaterinburg, 620002

Supplementary files

Supplementary Files
Action
1. JATS XML

Copyright (c) 2019 Pleiades Publishing, Ltd.