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posted by hubie on Wednesday May 10, @11:18PM   Printer-friendly
from the catch-a-falling-star-and-put-it-in-your-pocket dept.

A popular tool for identifying meteorites can destroy scientific information:

It's time to drop the magnets, meteorite hunters. The commonly used method for identifying space rocks can destroy scientific information.

Touching even a small magnet to a meteorite can erase any record the rock might have retained about the magnetic field of its parent body, researchers report in the April Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets. And the concern isn't theoretical: a subset of the oldest known Martian meteorites appear to have already had their magnetic memories wiped, the team showed.

[...] Planetary scientist Foteini Vervelidou uses meteorites from Mars — chunks of the planet that were blasted into space by an impact and later captured by Earth's gravity — to study its ancient past. Just a few hundred are known to exist. Rarer still are specimens that contain minerals carrying imprints of the Red Planet's magnetic field, which collapsed about 3.7 billion years ago (SN: 9/7/15). The oldest known Martian meteorites, which date to roughly 4.4 billion years ago, therefore present an "amazing chance to study the magnetic field," says Vervelidou, of MIT and the Institute of Earth Physics of Paris.

But such opportunities can be readily squandered, Vervelidou and colleagues have shown. The team's numerical calculations and experiments with earthly rocks — stand-ins for meteorites — confirmed that bringing a hand magnet close to a rock can rearrange the spins of the rock's electrons. That rearrangement overwrites the imprint of a previous magnetic field, a process called remagnetization.

[...] It is possible to evaluate a meteorite without destroying its magnetic properties. Vervelidou uses a lab instrument called a susceptibility meter, which measures how an object would respond to a magnetic field. And portable versions exist: She and a team of meteorite researchers used one to find nearly 1,000 meteorites on a recent expedition in Chile. Hopefully, Vervelidou says, some of those space rocks will shed light on Mars' magnetic past.

Anyone here ever find a meteorite?


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  • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 10, @11:34PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 10, @11:34PM (#1305806)

    How else am I going to sort them out of my gutters?

  • (Score: 1) by shrewdsheep on Thursday May 11, @08:09AM

    by shrewdsheep (5215) on Thursday May 11, @08:09AM (#1305845)

    ... is this a problem then? If you can find a 1000 meteorites on a single expedition, shouldn't the hobbyist be entitled to a few magnet-altered ones too?

  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by ChrisMaple on Thursday May 11, @06:36PM

    by ChrisMaple (6964) on Thursday May 11, @06:36PM (#1305901)

    a lab instrument called a susceptibility meter, which measures how an object would respond to a magnetic field...

    by exposing it to a magnetic field.

    OK, a weak magnetic field. Do you suppose our poor, feeble minds could handle that additional information?

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