Where Did Earth’s Water Come From? Not Melted Meteorites.

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Cosmochemistry
Researchers analyzed the water content of melted meteorites that had been floating around in space since the Solar System’s formation 4.5 billion years ago.
NASA astronaut Reid Wiseman tweeted this photo from the International Space Station on Tuesday morning, Sept. 2, 2014. Credit: NASA/Reid Wiseman

Washington, DC— Water makes up 71 percent of Earth’s surface, but no one knows how or when such massive quantities of it arrived on Earth.

A new study led by University of Maryland’s Megan Newcombe and including Carnegie’s Conel Alexander and Jianhua Wang brings scientists one step closer to answering that question. Published in the journal Nature, researchers analyzed melted meteorites that had been floating around in space since the Solar System’s formation 4.5 billion years ago. They found that these meteorites had extremely low water content—in fact, they were among the driest extraterrestrial materials ever measured.

These results, which let researchers rule them out as the primary source of Earth’s water, could have important implications for the search for water—and life—on other planets. It also helps researchers understand the unlikely conditions that aligned to make Earth a habitable planet.

“We wanted to understand how our planet managed to get water because it’s not completely obvious,” Newcombe said. “Getting water and having surface oceans on a planet that is small and relatively near the sun is a challenge.”

The team of researchers analyzed seven melted, or achondrite, meteorites that crashed into Earth billions of years after splintering from at least five planetesimals—objects that collided to form the planets in our Solar System. In a process known as melting, many of these planetesimals were heated up by the decay of radioactive elements in the early Solar System’s history, causing them to separate into layers with a crust, mantle and core.

Because these meteorites fell to Earth only recently, this experiment was the first time anyone had ever measured their volatiles. Maryland geology graduate student Liam Peterson used an electron microprobe to measure their levels of magnesium, iron, calcium and silicon, then joined Newcombe at Carnegie to measure their water contents with a secondary ion mass spectrometry instrument.

“The challenge of analyzing water in extremely dry materials is that any terrestrial water on the sample’s surface or inside the measuring instrument can easily be detected, tainting the results,” said  Alexander.  

To reduce contamination, researchers first baked their samples in a low-temperature vacuum oven to remove any surface water. Before the samples could be analyzed in the secondary ion mass spectrometer, the samples had to be dried out once again.

“I had to leave the samples under a turbo pump—a really high-quality vacuum—for more than a month to draw down the terrestrial water enough,” Newcombe said.

Some of their meteorite samples came from the inner Solar System, where Earth is located and where conditions are generally assumed to have been warm and dry. Other, rarer, samples came from the colder, icier outer reaches of our planetary system. While it was generally thought that water came to Earth from the outer Solar System, it has yet to be determined what types of objects could have carried that water across the Solar System.

Earth's water did not come from melted meteorites. Credit:  Jack Cook /©Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
Caption: Earth's water did not come from melted meteorites, according to a new study that analyzed melted meteorites that had been floating around in space since the Solar System’s formation 4.5 billion years ago. These meteorites had extremely low water content, regardless of their origin in the outer or inner Solar System, ruling them out as the primary source of Earth’s water.  The dashed white line in the attached illustration is the boundary with the outer Solar System showing material transport from the outer Solar System to the inner Solar System. Credit:  Jack Cook /©Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

“We knew that plenty of outer Solar System objects were differentiated, but it was sort of implicitly assumed that because they were from the outer Solar System they must also contain a lot of water,” said Sune Nielsen, a co-author and geologist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. “Our paper shows this is definitely not the case. As soon as meteorites melt, there is no remaining water.”

After analyzing the achondrite meteorite samples, researchers discovered that water comprised less than two-millionths of their mass. For comparison, the wettest meteorites—a group called carbonaceous chondrites—contain up to about 20 percent of water by weight, or 100,000 times more than the meteorite samples studied for this paper.

This means that the heating and melting of planetesimals leads to near-total water loss, regardless of where these planetesimals originated in the Solar System and how much water they started out with. The researchers discovered that, contrary to popular belief, not all outer solar system objects are rich in water. This led them to conclude that water was likely delivered to Earth via un-melted, or chondritic, meteorites.

The team’s findings have applications beyond geology. Scientists of many disciplines—and especially exoplanet researchers—are interested in the origin of Earth’s water because of its deep connections with life.

“Water is considered to be an ingredient for life to be able to flourish, so as we’re looking out into the universe and finding all of these exoplanets, we’re starting to work out which of those planetary systems could be potential hosts for life,” Newcombe said. “In order to be able to understand these other Solar Systems, we want to understand our own.”