Acid dissolution experiments - Carbonates and the 6.8-micrometer bands in interplanetary dust particles

Computer Science

Scientific paper

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Acids, Carbonates, Chemical Attack, Dissolving, Infrared Spectra, Interplanetary Dust, Absorption Spectra, Crystal Lattices, Meteoritic Composition, Protostars, Silicates, Interplanetary Dust, Cosmic Dust, Particles, Carbonates, Experiments, Laboratory Studies, Classification, Infrared, Wavelengths, Hydrocarbons, Techniques, Samples, Extraterrestrial, Absorption, Silicates, Spectra, Procedure, Composition, Analysis

Scientific paper

A chemical dissolution experiment on an interplanetary dust particle (IDP) showed that carbonates, not acid-insoluble organic compounds, were responsible for virtually all the absorption at 6.8 micrometers seen in the infrared spectra of this particle. The IDP examined had an infrared spectrum characteristic of layer-lattice silicates and belongs to a class of IDP's whose spectra resemble those of protostellar objects like W33 A, which also exhibit a band at 6.8 micrometers.

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