Aluminum-, Calcium- And Titanium-Rich Oxide Stardust In Ordinary Chondrite Meteorites
Larry R. Nittler, Conel M. O'D. Alexander, Roberto Gallino, Peter, Hoppe, Ann N. Nguyen, Frank J. Stadermann, Ernst K. Zinner

TL;DR
This study reports new isotopic data for presolar oxide grains in meteorites, including the first Ti oxide grains, revealing their stellar origins and processes like AGB star evolution and supernova contributions.
Contribution
It significantly expands the presolar oxide grain database and provides the first isotopic analysis of Ti oxide grains, linking them to specific stellar sources and processes.
Findings
Presolar Ti oxide grains identified for the first time.
Most grains originate from low-mass AGB stars, with some from supernovae.
Isotopic compositions support models of stellar evolution and Galactic chemical evolution.
Abstract
We report isotopic data for a total of 96 presolar oxide grains found in residues of several unequilibrated ordinary chondrite meteorites. Identified grain types include Al2O3, MgAl2O4, hibonite (CaAl12O19) and Ti oxide. This work greatly increases the presolar hibonite database, and is the first report of presolar Ti oxide. O-isotopic compositions of the grains span previously observed ranges and indicate an origin in red giant and asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars of low mass (<2.5 MSun) for most grains. Cool bottom processing in the parent AGB stars is required to explain isotopic compositions of many grains. Potassium-41 enrichments in hibonite grains are attributable to in situ decay of now-extinct 41Ca. Inferred initial 41Ca/40Ca ratios are in good agreement with model predictions for low-mass AGB star envelopes, provided that ionization suppresses 41Ca decay. Stable Mg and Ca…
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