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Dive into the research topics where E. R. D. Scott is active.

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Featured researches published by E. R. D. Scott.


Nature | 2007

Iron meteorite evidence for early formation and catastrophic disruption of protoplanets

Jijin Yang; E. R. D. Scott

In our Solar System, the planets formed by collisional growth from smaller bodies. Planetesimals collided to form Moon-to-Mars-sized protoplanets in the inner Solar System in 0.1–1u2009Myr, and these collided more energetically to form planets. Insights into the timing and nature of collisions during planetary accretion can be gained from meteorite studies. In particular, iron meteorites offer the best constraints on early stages of planetary accretion because most are remnants of the oldest bodies, which accreted and melted in <1.5u2009Myr, forming silicate mantles and iron-nickel metallic cores. Cooling rates for various groups of iron meteorites suggest that if the irons cooled isothermally in the cores of differentiated bodies, as conventionally assumed, these bodies were 5–200u2009km in diameter. This picture is incompatible, however, with the diverse cooling rates observed within certain groups, most notably the IVA group, but the large uncertainties associated with the measurements do not preclude it. Here we report cooling rates for group IVA iron meteorites that range from 100 to 6,000u2009Ku2009Myr-1, increasing with decreasing bulk Ni. Improvements in the cooling rate model, smaller error bars, and new data from an independent cooling rate indicator show that the conventional interpretation is no longer viable. Our results require that the IVA meteorites cooled in a 300-km-diameter metallic body that lacked an insulating mantle. This body probably formed ∼4,500u2009Myr ago in a ‘hit-and-run’ collision between Moon-to-Mars-sized protoplanets. This demonstrates that protoplanets of ∼103u2009km size accreted within the first 1.5u2009Myr, as proposed by theory, and that fragments of these bodies survived as asteroids.


Archive | 2010

Iron and Stony-Iron Meteorites and the Missing Mantle Meteorites and Asteroids

E. R. D. Scott; Joseph I. Goldstein; Joseph Yang; Erik Asphaug; William F. Bottke


Archive | 2011

Thermal and Impact History of H Chondrites: Was the Onion Shell Structure Punctured by Impacts During Metamorphism?

E. R. D. Scott; T. V. Krot; Joseph I. Goldstein; G. J. Taylor


Archive | 2010

Metamorphism and Impacts on the Parent Asteroid of H Chondrites

E. R. D. Scott; Diane Mandell; Joseph Yang; Joseph I. Goldstein; T. V. Krot; G. J. Taylor


Archive | 2010

Early Impact History of Ordinary Chondrite Parent Bodies Inferred from Troilite-Metal Intergrowths

E. R. D. Scott; Joseph I. Goldstein; Joseph Yang


Archive | 2010

Using Vesta and Its Fragments to Constrain the History of the Main Asteroid Belt

William F. Bottke; David Vokrouhlicky; David Nesvorny; E. R. D. Scott


Archive | 2006

Implications of Hit-and-Run Collisions Between Differentiated Protoplanets: Evidence from Iron Meteorites

Joseph I. Goldstein; Joseph Yang; E. R. D. Scott; G. J. Taylor; Erik Asphaug


Archive | 2011

Thermal, Shock, and Impact History of Group IVA and Other Iron Meteorites and Their Parent Asteroids

E. R. D. Scott; Joseph I. Goldstein; Joseph Yang


Archive | 2010

Meteorite and Theoretical Constraints on the Crystallization of Asteroidal Cores: Inside-Out or Outside-In?

Joseph Yang; Joseph I. Goldstein; E. R. D. Scott


Archive | 2010

Reheated Iron Metorites: Relation to Asteroidal Bodies and Their Impact Histories

Joseph I. Goldstein; Joseph Yang; E. R. D. Scott

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Joseph I. Goldstein

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Joseph Yang

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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G. J. Taylor

University of New Mexico

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Erik Asphaug

Arizona State University

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William F. Bottke

Southwest Research Institute

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David Nesvorny

Southwest Research Institute

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Jeffrey F. Bell

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Klaus Keil

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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David Vokrouhlicky

Charles University in Prague

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