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- Newsgroups: sci.astro
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!destroyer!cs.ubc.ca!newsserver.sfu.ca!rs11-annex3.sfu.ca!palmer
- From: Leigh Palmer <palmer@sfu.ca>
- Subject: Re: Toutatis Captured by Radar Images
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.070710.3423@sfu.ca>
- X-Xxmessage-Id: <A788D1A3CB011C17@rs11-annex3.sfu.ca>
- X-Xxdate: Sun, 24 Jan 93 07:07:15 GMT
- Sender: news@sfu.ca
- Organization: Simon Fraser University
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- References: <C1E8C9.66y@well.sf.ca.us>
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 07:07:10 GMT
- Lines: 34
-
- In article <C1E8C9.66y@well.sf.ca.us> Tom Van Flandern,
- metares@well.sf.ca.us writes:
-
- > That's an interesting question, and I have some speculations about
- >that myself, based on the synthesis of evidence for the explosion
- >hypothesis in my coming book. There are clues, such as the heavy neutron
- >flux exposure, shock, partial melting, charring, and isotopic anomalies
- >found in meteorites. Meteorite evidence (especially from chondrules)
- >strongly suggests an unspecified high-energy event, definitely not pre-
- >solar system. That's why the standard model calls for a nearby supernova
- >event; but they can't quite get the details to work out. I think the
- >relatively enormous implied abundance of Al-26 is one of the chief clues
- >about what really happened -- unless, of course, that hypothetical
- >supernova contained at least a solar-mass worth of Al-26.
-
- I have always subsumed collision into explosion when discussing this
- problem. One expects that, given the heterogeneity of the asteroids (seen
- by spectroscopy) and of the meteorites known, the asteroids and
- meteoroids originated in a large, differentiated body - a planet. Richard
- Shumacher's question got me thinking about explosion mechanisms, and I've
- got a really wild one to cast out for potshots. Suppose that a small
- planet differentiated gravitationally. What element(s) would be found at
- the center? Siderophiles would make up the largest single phase, but they
- are not the densest of metals. I don't know if uranium is a siderophile,
- but if it isn't, it is denser than iron, and it could very conceivably
- wind up at the center. A spontaneous chain reaction was once sustained in
- an ore body in Africa, in an epoch when U235 was sufficiently abundant to
- do it.
-
- * Perhaps a fission bomb could "happen" for a small enough planet. *
-
- Well, there it is. Start throwing rocks at it.
-
- Leigh
-