Magnetic fields on asteroid 4 Vesta recorded by the Millbillillie eucrite

Physics

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[1521] Geomagnetism And Paleomagnetism / Paleointensity, [1595] Geomagnetism And Paleomagnetism / Planetary Magnetism: All Frequencies And Wavelengths, [6205] Planetary Sciences: Solar System Objects / Asteroids, [6030] Planetary Sciences: Comets And Small Bodies / Magnetic Fields And Magnetism

Scientific paper

The detection of past dynamo activity on the asteroid 4 Vesta would confirm the existence of a metallic core, placing important constraints on its accretional and thermal history. Knowledge of the strength and duration of a dynamo on 4 Vesta also has important implications for the theoretical understanding of dynamo generation in small bodies. Magnetic fields from a putative core dynamo may have been recorded as remanent magnetization in achondritic meteorites of the howardite-eucrite-diogenite (HED) clan, which are thought to originate from the asteroid. To search for evidence for past dynamo activity, we performed a paleomagnetic study of nine mutually oriented samples of the Millbillillie eucrite. We found that the magnitude and direction of the magnetization change systematically for samples progressively farther away from the fusion crust, indicating that the samples were not remagnetized on Earth and that the interior samples carry an extraterrestrial magnetization. The fusion crust is ~1000 times more magnetic per unit mass than the interior, which was likely a source of contamination in earlier studies of bulk samples from this meteorite. Two interior samples were subjected to alternating field (AF) demagnetization up to 290 mT. We found a high coercivity (HC) component of magnetization carried by grains with coercivities between 70 and 180 mT. The HC magnetization is approximately unidirectional in the subsamples. The AF demagnetization profile of this component is similar to that of an anhysteretic remanent magnetization (ARM), suggesting that it may represent a thermoremanent magnetization (TRM). Under this assumption, our ARM paleointensity experiments yield field strengths of 2-3 μT while our IRM paleointensities are between 5 and 8 μT. Ongoing analysis of additional samples will further test this result. The HC magnetization may record 1) transient impact-generated fields, 2) remanent crustal fields, or 3) dynamo fields. Case 1) is unlikely if the sample has a thermoremanence because stable magnetization over the wide coercivity range observed for the HC component requires a magnetic field stable for the duration of the cooling process. Furthermore, the characteristic coercivities of the HC magnetization are very high compared to typical values for shock remanent magnetization. In case 2), the strength of putative impact-generated crustal fields on the moon suggests that impacts on Vesta would have caused remanent crustal fields of < 2 μT strength, which is below our observed paleointensities. Remanent crustal fields stronger than ~2 μT require a different magnetizing source, such as an earlier dynamo. Together, these facts suggest that the HC magnetization is unlikely to be a result of meteoroid bombardment and more probably record dynamo fields or remanent crustal fields due to an earlier dynamo. We therefore regard our results as tentative evidence of a past dynamo on 4 Vesta

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