Iron meteorites were originally divided into four groups designated by Roman numerals (I, II, III, IV). When more chemical data became available some groups were split. Group IV was split into IVA and IVB meteorites.[5] The chemical classification is based on diagrams that plot nickel content against different trace elements (e.g. gallium, germanium and iridium). The different iron meteorite groups appear as data point clusters.[1][6]
Parent body
IVB meteorites formed the core of a parent body that was later destroyed, some of the fragments falling on Earth as meteorites.[3] Modeling the IVB parent body has to take into account the extreme chemical composition, especially the depletion of volatile elements (gallium, germanium) and the enrichment in refractory elements (iridium) compared to other iron meteorites.[2]
The history of the parent body has been reconstructed in detail. The IVB parent body will have formed from material that condensed at the highest temperatures while the solar nebula cooled off. The enrichment in refractory elements was caused by less than 10% of the condensible material going into the parent body.[2] Thermal models suggest that the IVB parent body formed 0.3millionyears after the formation of the calcium-aluminium-rich inclusions, and at a distance from the sun of 0.9Astronomical units.[7][8]
Differentiation of the planet body into a core and mantle was most likely driven by the heat produced by the decay of 26Al and 60Fe.[9][10] The high nickel concentrations were caused by oxidizing physical conditions. The chemical variation of IVB specimens can be explained as different stages of the fractional crystallization of the convecting core of the parent body.[3] The exact size of the parent body is still debated. Modelling of cooling rates suggest that it had a 140±30km radius with a 70±15km radius core. The fast cooling rates are explained by a grazing-shot collision of the parent body with a larger asteroid. This removed the mantle from the parent body, leaving the shattered iron core behind to rapidly cool.[3]
Notable specimens
The Hoba meteorite is the largest meteorite specimen ever found.
As of December 2012, 14 specimens of IVB meteorites are known.[11] A notable specimen is the Hoba meteorite, the largest known intact meteorite. There has never been an observed fall of an IVB meteorite.[11]
^ abcdYang, Jijin; Goldstein, Joseph I.; Michael, Joseph R.; Kotula, Paul G.; Scott, Edward R.D. (31 July 2010). "Thermal history and origin of the IVB iron meteorites and their parent body". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. 74 (15): 4493–4506. Bibcode:2010GeCoA..74.4493Y. doi:10.1016/j.gca.2010.04.011.
^Haghighipour, Nader; Scott, Edward R. D. (20 April 2012). "On the Effect of Giant Planets on the Scattering of Parent Bodies of Iron Meteorite from the Terrestrial Planet Region into the Asteroid Belt: A Concept Study". The Astrophysical Journal. 749 (2): 113. arXiv:1202.2975. Bibcode:2012ApJ...749..113H. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/749/2/113.
^Moskovitz, Nicholas A.; Walker, Richard J. (31 July 2011). "Size of the group IVA iron meteorite core: Constraints from the age and composition of Muonionalusta". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 308 (3–4): 410–416. arXiv:1106.2479. Bibcode:2011E&PSL.308..410M. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2011.06.010.