Origin of hydrogen isotopic variations in chondritic water and organics
Laurette Piani, Yves Marrocchi, Lionel G. Vacher, Hisayoshi Yurimoto, and Martin Bizzarro

TL;DR
This study analyzes hydrogen isotopic variations in chondritic water and organics, revealing that these variations are primarily influenced by early solar system processes rather than parent-body alterations.
Contribution
It provides in situ measurements of D/H ratios in water across multiple chondrite groups, linking isotopic signatures to protoplanetary disk interactions and formation conditions.
Findings
Distinct D/H signatures for each chondrite group
Limited influence of parent-body processes on isotopic variations
Implication of early disk interactions in shaping isotopic signatures
Abstract
Chondrites are rocky fragments of asteroids that formed at different times and heliocentric distances in the early solar system. Most chondrite groups contain water-bearing minerals, attesting that both water-ice and dust were accreted on their parent asteroids. Nonetheless, the hydrogen isotopic composition (D/H) of water in the different chondrite groups remains poorly constrained, due to the intimate mixture of hydrated minerals and organic compounds, the other main H-bearing phase in chondrites. Building on our recent works using in situ secondary ion mass spectrometry analyses, we determined the H isotopic composition of water in a large set of chondritic samples (CI, CM, CO, CR, and C-ungrouped carbonaceous chondrites) and report that water in each group shows a distinct and unique D/H signature. Based on a comparison with literature data on bulk chondrites and their water and…
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