Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA, USA.
Institut für Planetologie, University of Münster, Münster, Germany.
Science. 2020 Nov 13;370(6518):837-840. doi: 10.1126/science.aaz8482.
Calcium-aluminum-rich inclusions (CAIs) in meteorites are the first solids to have formed in the Solar System, defining the epoch of its birth on an absolute time scale. This provides a link between astronomical observations of star formation and cosmochemical studies of Solar System formation. We show that the distinct molybdenum isotopic compositions of CAIs cover almost the entire compositional range of material that formed in the protoplanetary disk. We propose that CAIs formed while the Sun was in transition from the protostellar to pre-main sequence (T Tauri) phase of star formation, placing Solar System formation within an astronomical context. Our results imply that the bulk of the material that formed the Sun and Solar System accreted within the CAI-forming epoch, which lasted less than 200,000 years.
陨石中的钙铝富包体(CAIs)是太阳系中最早形成的固体,为其诞生的绝对时间尺度提供了一个定义。这为恒星形成的天文观测和太阳系形成的宇宙化学研究之间建立了联系。我们表明,CAIs 的独特钼同位素组成几乎涵盖了在原行星盘中形成的物质的整个组成范围。我们提出 CAIs 是在太阳从原恒星到主序前(T 型星)阶段的转变过程中形成的,将太阳系的形成置于天文背景下。我们的结果表明,形成太阳和太阳系的大部分物质都是在 CAI 形成的时期内吸积的,这个时期持续了不到 20 万年。