Bulletin of the American Physical Society
23rd Biennial Conference of the APS Topical Group on Shock Compression of Condensed Matter
Volume 68, Number 8
Monday–Friday, June 19–23, 2023; Chicago, Illinois
Session Z05: Minerals under dynamic compression
3:45 PM–4:30 PM,
Thursday, June 22, 2023
Sheraton Grand Chicago Riverwalk
Room: Sheraton 4 & 5
Chair: Charles Starrett, LANL
Abstract: Z05.00001 : Untrafast solid-state phase transformation of silicate minerals during shock compression
3:45 PM–4:15 PM
Presenter:
Takuo Okuchi
(Institute for Integrated Radiation and Nuclear Science, Kyoto University)
Authors:
Takuo Okuchi
(Institute for Integrated Radiation and Nuclear Science, Kyoto University)
Naotaka Tomioka
(Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology)
In this study, we try to experimentally evaluate the actual time and pressure scales of these shock compression processes. For that purpose, we observed the transformation mechanism of shock-compressed α-(Mg,Fe)2SiO4 into ringwoodite [ε-Mg2SiO4] in the solid state [3]. Ringwoodite is one of the most commonly-observed high-pressure polymorph mineral in the meteorites. We focused a high-power optical laser pulse into single crystal of α-Mg2SiO4 for inducing strong shock compression, where its transformation process was time-resolved by ultrafast diffractometry using SACLA x-ray free electron laser pulse of femtosecond time width. We found that a lattice-shear mechanism proceeded within several nanoseconds, which was much faster than any previous estimation of solid-state structure transformation mechanism of silicate minerals.
It was demonstrated that the mechanism proceeds even during short-lived shocks equivalent to those induced by impacts of small (sub-kilometer-scaled) parent asteroids. The mechanism mostly works during shock releases, such that the peak shock pressures deduced from the existence of shear-induced olivine polymorphs could be seriously underestimated. Since shorter-duration compression events occur more frequently in the asteroid impacts, the shorter events could have more frequently recorded the fast mechanism. When we carefully search for such impact records in more of meteorites and asteroids, we will be able to reconstruct the evolution history of early solar system through numerous muti-scale impact events.
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