A transmission electron microscopy study of presolar hibonite
Thomas J. Zega, Conel M. O'D. Alexander, Larry R. Nittler, and Rhonda, M. Stroud

TL;DR
This study combines isotopic and microstructural analyses of presolar hibonite grains to identify their stellar origins and formation conditions, revealing insights into stellar processes and grain formation temperatures.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed TEM microstructural data on presolar hibonite grains and correlates isotopic signatures with formation environments and microstructural features.
Findings
Four grains formed in low-mass stars, one in a supernova.
All grains are single crystals with some growth defects.
Condensation temperatures ranged from 1480 K to 1743 K.
Abstract
We report isotopic and microstructural data on five presolar hibonite grains identified in an acid residue of the Krymka LL3.1 ordinary chondrite. Isotopic measurements by secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) verified a presolar circumstellar origin for the grains. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) examination of the crystal structure and chemistry of the grains was enabled by in situ sectioning and lift-out with a focused-ion-beam scanning-electron microscope. Comparisons of isotopic compositions with models indicate that four of the five grains formed in low-mass stars that evolved through the red-giant/asymptotic-giant branches, whereas one grain formed in the ejecta of a Type II supernova. Selected-area electron-diffraction patterns show that all grains are single crystals of hibonite. Some grains contain stacking faults and small spreads in orientation that can be attributed…
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