Other
Scientific paper
Dec 1997
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1997icar..130..517g&link_type=abstract
Icarus, Volume 130, Issue 2, pp. 517-533.
Other
17
Scientific paper
Chondrules constitute a significant fraction of primitive meteorites. Their thermal history includes rapid melting followed by cooling on timescales of minutes to hours. The mechanism underlying such extreme, short-lived thermal excursions away from the prevailing, much milder nebular equilibrium conditions has eluded understanding for many decades. Among the prime candidate mechanisms long thought to provide a possible explanation of chondrule formation is lightning-large-scale electrostatic discharges-in the protoplanetary nebula. In this paper, we explore the possible occurrence of such electrostatic discharges in the protoplanetary nebula powered by precipitation or other processes analogous to that believed to cause lightning on Earth and other planets. Our analysis incorporates charge separation in collisions of water-ice or other solid particles, and includes a self-consistent nebular electrical conductivity determined by a balance between production of free electrons and ions and loss to grain surfaces. We find that development of a large-scale electric field strong enough to produce discharges does not occur under conditions characteristic of protostellar nebulae. This is mainly a result of the fact that the high electrical conductivity of the environment and the relatively low density of solid particles combine to yield a situation in which the large scale electric fields, as well as the electric charges segregated on the particles are short circuited by the highly mobile electrons and ions. We also consider the possibility of lightning in altered nebula environments with higher than canonical dust density, such as a dust subdisk.
Gibbard Seran G.
Levy Eugene H.
Morfill Gregor E.
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