Comet-like mineralogy of olivine crystals in an extrasolar proto-Kuiper belt
B. L. de Vries, B. Acke, J. A. D. L. Blommaert, C. Waelkens, L. B. F., M. Waters, B. Vandenbussche, M. Min, G. Olofsson, C. Dominik, L. Decin, M. J., Barlow, A. Brandeker, J. Di Francesco, A. M. Glauser, J. Greaves, P. M., Harvey, W. S. Holland, R. J. Ivison, R. Liseau

TL;DR
This study detects magnesium-rich olivine crystals in the extrasolar proto-Kuiper belt of Beta Pictoris, revealing compositions similar to primitive Solar System comets, thus providing insights into extrasolar cometary material.
Contribution
It reports the first detection and composition analysis of olivine crystals in an extrasolar proto-Kuiper belt, linking it to primitive Solar System comets.
Findings
Olivine crystals are magnesium-rich with x=0.01+/-0.001.
Crystals constitute about 3.6% of total dust mass.
Composition similar to primitive Solar System comets.
Abstract
Some planetary systems harbour debris disks containing planetesimals such as asteroids and comets. Collisions between such bodies produce small dust particles, the spectral features of which reveal their composition and, hence, that of their parent bodies. A measurement of the composition of olivine crystals has been done for the protoplanetary disk HD100546 and for olivine crystals in the warm inner parts of planetary systems. The latter compares well with the iron-rich olivine in asteroids (x<0.29). In the cold outskirts of the Beta Pictoris system, an analogue to the young Solar System, olivine crystals were detected but their composition remained undetermined, leaving unknown how the composition of the bulk of Solar System cometary olivine grains compares with that of extrasolar comets. Here we report the detection of the 69-micrometre-wavelength band of olivine crystals in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Space Exploration and Technology
