The Arpu Kuilpu Meteorite: In-depth characterization of an H5 chondrite delivered from a Jupiter Family Comet orbit
Seamus L. Anderson, Gretchen K. Benedix, Belinda Godel, Romain M. L., Alosius, Daniela Krietsch, Henner Busemann, Colin Maden, Jon M. Friedrich,, Lara R. McMonigal, Kees C. Welten, Marc W. Caffee, Robert J. Macke, Se\'an, Cadogan, Dominic H. Ryan, Fred Jourdan, Celia Mayers

TL;DR
This study provides a comprehensive analysis of the Arpu Kuilpu meteorite, revealing its classification as an unbrecciated H5 chondrite with detailed mineral, isotopic, and exposure age data, and suggests many small objects on JFC orbits are asteroidal.
Contribution
It offers an in-depth, multi-method characterization of the Arpu Kuilpu meteorite, linking its orbit to asteroidal origins despite its comet-like orbit.
Findings
Arpu Kuilpu is an unbrecciated H5 ordinary chondrite.
The meteorite experienced a recent impact heating event around 4.47 billion years ago.
Its meteoroid was small, likely between 1-5 cm in radius.
Abstract
Over the Nullarbor Plain in South Australia, the Desert Fireball Network detected a fireball on the night of 1 June 2019 (7:30 pm local time), and six weeks later recovered a single meteorite (42 g) named Arpu Kuilpu. This meteorite was then distributed to a consortium of collaborating institutions to be measured and analyzed by a number of methodologies including: SEM-EDS, EPMA, ICP-MS, gamma-ray spectrometry, ideal gas pycnometry, magnetic susceptibility measurement, {\mu}CT, optical microscopy, and accelerator and noble gas mass spectrometry techniques. These analyses revealed that Arpu Kuilpu is an unbrecciated H5 ordinary chondrite, with minimal weathering (W0-1) and minimal shock (S2). The olivine and pyroxene mineral compositions (in mol%) are Fa: 19.2 +- 0.2, and Fs: 16.8 +- 0.2, further supporting the H5 type and class. The measured oxygen isotopes are also consistent with an H…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Spacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies · Planetary Science and Exploration
