A comprehensive study of noble gases and nitrogen in Hypatia, a diamond-rich pebble from SW Egypt
Guillaume Avice, Matthias M. M. Meier, Bernard Marty, Rainer Wieler,, Jan D. Kramers, Falko Langenhorst, Pierre Cartigny, Colin Maden, Laurent, Zimmermann, Marco A. G. Andreoli

TL;DR
This study analyzes noble gases and nitrogen in Hypatia, a diamond-rich extraterrestrial pebble, revealing its cosmic origin, exposure history, and formation conditions, while challenging previous hypotheses of a cometary origin.
Contribution
It provides detailed isotopic and elemental analysis of Hypatia's noble gases and nitrogen, offering new insights into its extraterrestrial nature and formation history, and refuting earlier cometary origin claims.
Findings
Hypatia contains noble gases with isotopic signatures close to meteoritic Q component.
The sample's cosmic-ray exposure age is approximately 0.1 million years, indicating high shielding.
N isotopic disequilibrium suggests formation of diamonds in space.
Abstract
This is a follow-up study of a work by Kramers et al. (2013) on an unusual diamond-rich rock found in the SW side of the Libyan Desert Glass strewn field. This pebble, called Hypatia, is composed of almost pure carbon. Transmission Electron Microscopy and X-ray diffraction results reveal that Hypatia is made of defect-rich diamond containing lonsdaleite and deformation bands. These characteristics are compatible with an impact origin on Earth and/or in space. We analyzed concentrations and isotopic compositions of all five noble gases and nitrogen in several mg sized Hypatia samples. These data confirm that Hypatia is extra-terrestrial. The sample is rich in trapped noble gases with an isotopic composition close to the meteoritic Q component. 40Ar/36Ar ratios in individual steps are as low as 0.4. Concentrations of cosmic-ray produced 21Ne correspond to a nominal cosmic-ray exposure age…
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