LPSC

50th annual Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, bringing together "international specialists in petrology, geochemistry, geophysics, geology, and astronomy to present the latest results of research in planetary science," Houston, TX Abstract deadline - January 9, 2019 Program available - February 1, 2019  

2019 Gordon Research Conference – Origins of Solar Systems

Meteoritical, Spacecraft and Astrophysical Perspectives on the Assembly and Composition of Planets Hosted at Mount Holyoke College, 50 College Street, South Hadley, MA, US The Gordon Research Conference on Origins of Solar Systems brings together a diverse group of scientists to discuss research at the frontier of understanding how planets and planetary systems form. Invited speakers from the fields of astronomy, astrophysics, cosmochemistry, and planetary science will present their latest findings. A particular focus at this meeting will be the latest results from the Hayabusa2, Osiris-Rex, and New Horizons missions to primitive solar system bodies, exoplanet results from the TESS space telescope,Continue reading

2019 Sagan Exoplanet Summer Workshop – Astrobiology for Astronomers

2019 Sagan Exoplanet Summer Workshop - Astrobiology for Astronomers HOSTED BY THE NASA EXOPLANET SCIENCE INSTITUTE, HAMEETMAN AUDITORIUM, CAHILL BUILDING, CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, PASADENA, CA Submit talks/posters - May 9- June 28 FREE to register - deadline May 16

Talk by Sarah Stewart at AGU 2019

San Francisco. "Expect more surprises during planet formation" Abstract: Planet assembly drives materials into pressure-temperature regimes far beyond the current states of planetary objects in our solar system. As a result, planet formation produces unfamiliar phenomena, such impact-generated vapor bubbles in the solar nebula and fast-spinning synestias. These newly recognized phenomena lead to fresh views on how to use geochemical observations to reconstruct planet formation.

Talk by James Eguchi at AGU Fall Meeting

San Francisco. "Experimental investigation of a model ophicarbonate at deep subduction zone conditions – Implications for cycling of CO2 and H2O" Abstract: Due to their high CO2 and H2O contents, and presence in both the mantle lithosphere1 as well as the mantle wedge2, understanding the fate of ophicarbonates under subduction zone conditions is critical to understanding how these rocks may affect the deep H2O and C cycles3. However, the fate of ophicarbonates during subduction has only been studied in the context of metamorphic devolatilization3 at shallow depths. Here, we present results from an experimental phase relations study of a modelContinue reading

Poster by Daman Grewal at AGU 2019

San Francisco. "The core-mantle partitioning of carbon and nitrogen in carbon-undersaturated ultramafic systems" Abstract: In addition to their highly volatile character, segregation into the metallic core could have played an important role in explaining the depletion of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) in the bulk silicate reservoirs of rocky bodies . As the core-mantle partitioning character of C and N strongly depends on fO2, they can act as a powerful tracers to understand the fO2-dependent volatile accretion history of terrestrial bodies. Previous high P-T experimental studies have shown that the highly siderophile character of C increases with decrease in fO2,Continue reading

Talk by Megan Duncan at AGU 2019

San Francisco. "Variations in Moderately Volatile Elements in Planetary Bodies from Impact Vaporization" Abstract: Planet-building processes have a strong effect on the distribution of the elements in the resulting bodies. In particular, moderately volatile elements (MVEs) have distinct differences in depletion between the meteorite groups and the planets. Understanding the chemical effects of impacts and post-impact processes are necessary in order to place constraints on the bulk composition of the planet (pre-differentiation). Vaporizing collisions, common in energetic periods of accretion such giant planet migration and the terrestrial giant impact stage, can separate refractory and volatile components as the system re-equilibratesContinue reading

Scroll to top