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Dive into the research topics where Jamie E. Elsila is active.

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Featured researches published by Jamie E. Elsila.


Science | 2011

Origin and Evolution of Prebiotic Organic Matter As Inferred from the Tagish Lake Meteorite

C. D. K. Herd; Alexandra I. Blinova; Danielle N. Simkus; Yongsong Huang; Rafael Tarozo; Conel M. Od. Alexander; Frank Gyngard; Larry R. Nittler; George D. Cody; Marilyn L. Fogel; Yoko Kebukawa; A. L. David Kilcoyne; Robert W. Hilts; Greg F. Slater; Daniel P. Glavin; Jason P. Dworkin; Michael P. Callahan; Jamie E. Elsila; Bradley T. De Gregorio; Rhonda M. Stroud

The study of organic matter in a well-preserved meteorite provides insight into processes that affected its parent asteroids. The complex suite of organic materials in carbonaceous chondrite meteorites probably originally formed in the interstellar medium and/or the solar protoplanetary disk, but was subsequently modified in the meteorites’ asteroidal parent bodies. The mechanisms of formation and modification are still very poorly understood. We carried out a systematic study of variations in the mineralogy, petrology, and soluble and insoluble organic matter in distinct fragments of the Tagish Lake meteorite. The variations correlate with indicators of parent body aqueous alteration. At least some molecules of prebiotic importance formed during the alteration.


Meteoritics & Planetary Science | 2010

The Effects of Parent Body Processes on Amino Acids in Carbonaceous Chondrites

Daniel P. Glavin; Michael P. Callahan; Jason P. Dworkin; Jamie E. Elsila

To investigate the effect of parent body processes on the abundance, distribution, and enantiomeric composition of amino acids in carbonaceous chondrites, the water extracts from nine different powdered CI, CM, and CR carbonaceous chondrites were analyzed for amino acids by ultra performance liquid chromatography-fluorescence detection and time-of-flight mass spectrometry (UPLC-FD ⁄ ToF-MS). Four aqueously altered type 1 carbonaceous chondrites including Orgueil (CI1), Meteorite Hills (MET) 01070 (CM1), Scott Glacier (SCO) 06043 (CM1), and Grosvenor Mountains (GRO) 95577 (CR1) were analyzed using this technique for the first time. Analyses of these meteorites revealed low levels of two- to five-carbon acyclic amino alkanoic acids with concentrations ranging from approximately 1 to 2,700 parts-per-billion (ppb). The type 1 carbonaceous chondrites have a distinct distribution of the five-carbon (C5) amino acids with much higher relative abundances of the c- and d-amino acids compared to the type 2 and type 3 carbonaceous chondrites, which are dominated by a-amino acids. Much higher amino acid abundances were found in the CM2 chondrites Murchison, Lonewolf Nunataks (LON) 94102, and Lewis Cliffs (LEW) 90500, the CR2 Elephant Moraine (EET) 92042, and the CR3 Queen Alexandra Range (QUE) 99177. For example, a-aminoisobutyric acid (a-AIB) and isovaline were approximately 100 to 1000 times more abundant in the type 2 and 3 chondrites compared to the more aqueously altered type 1 chondrites. Most of the chiral amino acids identified in these meteorites were racemic, indicating an extraterrestrial abiotic origin. However, nonracemic isovaline was observed in the aqueously altered carbonaceous chondrites Murchison, Orgueil, SCO 06043, and GRO 95577 with l-isovaline excesses ranging from approximately 11 to 19%, whereas the most pristine, unaltered carbonaceous chondrites analyzed in this study had no detectable l-isovaline excesses. These results are consistent with the theory that aqueous alteration played an important role in amplification of small initial left handed isovaline excesses on the parent bodies.


Science | 2012

Radar-Enabled Recovery of the Sutter’s Mill Meteorite, a Carbonaceous Chondrite Regolith Breccia

Peter Jenniskens; Marc Fries; Q.-Z. Yin; Michael E. Zolensky; Alexander N. Krot; Scott A. Sandford; Derek W. G. Sears; Robert Beauford; Denton S. Ebel; Jon M. Friedrich; Kazuhide Nagashima; Josh Wimpenny; Akane Yamakawa; Kunihiko Nishiizumi; Yasunori Hamajima; Marc W. Caffee; Kees C. Welten; M. Laubenstein; Andrew M. Davis; Steven B. Simon; Philipp R. Heck; Edward D. Young; Issaku E. Kohl; Mark H. Thiemens; Morgan H. Nunn; Takashi Mikouchi; Kenji Hagiya; Kazumasa Ohsumi; Thomas A. Cahill; Jonathan A. Lawton

The Meteor That Fell to Earth In April 2012, a meteor was witnessed over the Sierra Nevada Mountains in California. Jenniskens et al. (p. 1583) used a combination of photographic and video images of the fireball coupled with Doppler weather radar images to facilitate the rapid recovery of meteorite fragments. A comprehensive analysis of some of these fragments shows that the Sutters Mill meteorite represents a new type of carbonaceous chondrite, a rare and primitive class of meteorites that contain clues to the origin and evolution of primitive materials in the solar system. The unexpected and complex nature of the fragments suggests that the surfaces of C-class asteroids, the presumed parent bodies of carbonaceous chondrites, are more complex than previously assumed. Analysis of this rare meteorite implies that the surfaces of C-class asteroids can be more complex than previously assumed. Doppler weather radar imaging enabled the rapid recovery of the Sutter’s Mill meteorite after a rare 4-kiloton of TNT–equivalent asteroid impact over the foothills of the Sierra Nevada in northern California. The recovered meteorites survived a record high-speed entry of 28.6 kilometers per second from an orbit close to that of Jupiter-family comets (Tisserand’s parameter = 2.8 ± 0.3). Sutter’s Mill is a regolith breccia composed of CM (Mighei)–type carbonaceous chondrite and highly reduced xenolithic materials. It exhibits considerable diversity of mineralogy, petrography, and isotope and organic chemistry, resulting from a complex formation history of the parent body surface. That diversity is quickly masked by alteration once in the terrestrial environment but will need to be considered when samples returned by missions to C-class asteroids are interpreted.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1997

The 2140 cm-1 (4.673 microns) solid CO band: the case for interstellar O2 and N2 and the photochemistry of nonpolar interstellar ice analogs

Jamie E. Elsila; Louis J. Allamandola; Scott A. Sandford

The infrared spectra of CO frozen in nonpolar ices containing N2, CO2, O2, and H2O and the UV photochemistry of these interstellar/precometary ice analogs are reported. The spectra are used to test the hypothesis that the narrow 2140 cm-1 (4.673 microns) interstellar absorption feature attributed to solid CO might be produced by CO frozen in ices containing nonpolar species such as N2 and O2. It is shown that mixed molecular ices containing CO, N2, O2, and CO2 provide a good match to the interstellar band at all temperatures between 12 and 30 K both before and after photolysis. The optical constants (real and imaginary parts of the index of refraction) in the region of the solid CO feature are reported for several of these ices. The N2 and O2 absorptions at 2328 cm-1 (4.296 microns) and 1549 cm-1 (6.456 microns), respectively, are also shown. The best matches between the narrow interstellar band and the feature in the laboratory spectra of nonpolar ices are for samples which contain comparable amounts of N2, O2, CO2, and CO. Co-adding the CO band from an N2:O2:CO2:CO = 1:5:1/2:1 ice with that of an H2O:CO = 20:1 ice provides an excellent fit across the entire interstellar CO feature. The four-component, nonpolar ice accounts for the narrow 2140 cm-1 portion of the feature which is associated with quiescent regions of dense molecular clouds. Using this mixture, and applying the most recent cosmic abundance values, we derive that between 15% and 70% of the available interstellar N is in the form of frozen N2 along several lines of sight toward background stars. This is reduced to a range of 1%-30% for embedded objects with lines of sight more dominated by warmer grains. The cosmic abundance of O tied up in frozen O2 lies in the 10%-45% range toward background sources, and it is between 1% and 20% toward embedded objects. The amount of oxygen tied up in CO and CO2 frozen in nonpolar ices can be as much as 2%-10% toward background sources and on the order of 0.2%-5% for embedded objects. Similarly 3%-13% of the carbon is tied up in CO and CO2 frozen in nonpolar ices toward field stars, and 0.2%-6% toward embedded objects. These numbers imply that most of the N is in N2, and a significant fraction of the available O is in O2 in the most quiescent regions of dense clouds. Ultraviolet photolysis of these ices produces a variety of photoproducts including CO2, N2O, O3, CO3, HCO, H2CO, and possibly NO and NO2. XCN is not produced in these experiments, placing important constraints on the origin of the enigmatic interstellar XCN feature. N2O and CO3 have not been previously considered as interstellar ice components.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2002

Side Group Addition to the Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon Coronene by Ultraviolet Photolysis in Cosmic Ice Analogs

Max P. Bernstein; Jamie E. Elsila; Jason P. Dworkin; Scott A. Sandford; Louis J. Allamandola; Richard N. Zare

Ultraviolet photolysis of various coronene-ice mixtures at low temperature and pressure caused the addition of amino (”NH2), methyl (”CH3), methoxy (”OCH3), cyano/isocyano (”CN, ”NC), and acid (”COOH) functional groups to the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) coronene (C24H12), in addition to previously reported alcohol (”OH) and ketone (>C»O) formation. This work represents the first experimental evidence that ice photochemistry may have contributed to the aromatics bearing carbon and nitrogen containing side groups that are detected in primitive meteorites and interplanetary dust particles. Furthermore, these results suggest that a wide range of modified PAHs should be expected in interstellar ices and materials that predated solar system formation. The implications of these results for interstellar and meteoritic chemistry are discussed. Subject headings: astrobiology — astrochemistry — ISM: molecules — meteors, meteoroids — molecular processes — ultraviolet: ISM


Astrobiology | 2009

Formation of Uracil from the Ultraviolet Photo-Irradiation of Pyrimidine in Pure H2O Ices

Michel Nuevo; Stefanie N. Milam; Scott A. Sandford; Jamie E. Elsila; Jason P. Dworkin

The detection of nucleobases in carbonaceous chondrites such as Murchison supports the scenario in which extraterrestrial organic molecules could have contributed to the origin of life on Earth. However, such large molecules have not been observed to date in astrophysical environments, in particular, comets and the interstellar medium (ISM). The physico-chemical conditions under which nucleobases and, more generally, N-heterocycles were formed are unknown, as are their mechanisms of formation. In this work, H2O:pyrimidine ice mixtures were irradiated with UV photons under interstellar/cometary-relevant conditions to study the formation of pyrimidine derivatives, including the nucleobase uracil. Liquid and gas chromatography analyses of the samples produced in our experiments revealed the presence of numerous photoproducts among which 4(3H)-pyrimidone and uracil could be conclusively identified. The photostability of pyrimidine against UV photons was also studied, and we showed that it would survive from the ISM to the solar nebula if formed and preserved in ice mantles on the surface of cold grains. We propose pathways for the formation of 4(3H)-pyrimidone and uracil under astrophysically relevant conditions and discuss the possibility for such molecules to survive from the ISM to their delivery to Earth and other Solar System bodies.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2003

SIDE GROUP ADDITION TO THE POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBON CORONENE BY PROTON IRRADIATION IN COSMIC ICE ANALOGS

Max P. Bernstein; Marla H. Moore; Jamie E. Elsila; Scott A. Sandford; Louis J. Allamandola; Richard N. Zare

Ices at ∼15 K consisting of the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon coronene (C24H12) condensed either with H2O, CO2, or CO in the ratio of 1 : 100 or greater have been subjected to MeV proton bombardment from a Van de Graaff generator. The resulting reaction products have been examined by infrared transmissionreflection-transmission spectroscopy and by microprobe laser-desorption laser-ionization mass spectrometry. Just as in the case of UV photolysis, oxygen atoms are added to coronene, yielding, in the case of H2O ices, the addition of one or more alcohol ( i OH) and ketone (1CuO) side chains to the coronene scaffolding. There are, however, significant differences between the products formed by proton irradiation and the products formed by UV photolysis of coronene containing CO and CO2 ices. The formation of a coronene carboxylic acid ( i COOH) by proton irradiation is facile in solid CO but not in CO2, the reverse of what was previously observed for UV photolysis under otherwise identical conditions. This work presents evidence that cosmicray irradiation of interstellar or cometary ices should have contributed to the formation of aromatics bearing ketone and carboxylic acid functional groups in primitive meteorites and interplanetary dust particles. Subject headings: astrobiology — astrochemistry — comets: general — cosmic rays — ISM: molecules — molecular processes


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2003

Evidence That Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Two Carbonaceous Chondrites Predate Parent Body Formation

Fiona L. Plows; Jamie E. Elsila; Richard N. Zare; Peter R. Buseck

Organic material in meteorites provides insight into the cosmochemistry of the early solar system. The distribution of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in the Allende and Murchison carbonaceous chondrites was investigated by use of a technique called microprobe laser-desorption laser-ionization mass spectrometry, which permits spatial resolution with approximately a 40-μm spot size. Sharp chemical gradients of PAHs are associated with specific meteorite features. The ratios of various PAH intensities relative to the smallest PAH, naphthalene, are nearly constant across the sample. These findings suggest a common origin for PAHs dating before or during the formation of the parent body, consistent with proposed interstellar formation mechanisms.


Astrobiology | 2011

Distribution and Stable Isotopic Composition of Amino Acids from Fungal Peptaibiotics: Assessing the Potential for Meteoritic Contamination

Jamie E. Elsila; Michael P. Callahan; Daniel P. Glavin; Jason P. Dworkin; Hans Brückner

The presence of nonprotein α-dialkyl-amino acids such as α-aminoisobutyric acid (α-AIB) and isovaline (Iva), which are considered to be relatively rare in the terrestrial biosphere, has long been used as an indication of the indigeneity of meteoritic amino acids. However, recent work showing the presence of α-AIB and Iva in peptides produced by a widespread group of filamentous fungi indicates the possibility of a terrestrial biotic source for the α-AIB observed in some meteorites. We measured the amino acid distribution and stable carbon and nitrogen isotopic composition of four α-AIB-containing fungal peptides and compared this data to similar meteoritic measurements. We show that the relatively simple distribution of the C(4) and C(5) amino acids in fungal peptides is distinct from the complex distribution observed in many carbonaceous chondrites. We also identify potentially diagnostic relationships between the stable isotopic compositions of pairs of amino acids from the fungal peptides that may aid in ruling out fungal contamination as a source of meteoritic amino acids.


ACS central science | 2016

Meteoritic Amino Acids: Diversity in Compositions Reflects Parent Body Histories

Jamie E. Elsila; José C. Aponte; Donna G. Blackmond; Aaron S. Burton; Jason P. Dworkin; Daniel P. Glavin

The analysis of amino acids in meteorites dates back over 50 years; however, it is only in recent years that research has expanded beyond investigations of a narrow set of meteorite groups (exemplified by the Murchison meteorite) into meteorites of other types and classes. These new studies have shown a wide diversity in the abundance and distribution of amino acids across carbonaceous chondrite groups, highlighting the role of parent body processes and composition in the creation, preservation, or alteration of amino acids. Although most chiral amino acids are racemic in meteorites, the enantiomeric distribution of some amino acids, particularly of the nonprotein amino acid isovaline, has also been shown to vary both within certain meteorites and across carbonaceous meteorite groups. Large l-enantiomeric excesses of some extraterrestrial protein amino acids (up to ∼60%) have also been observed in rare cases and point to nonbiological enantiomeric enrichment processes prior to the emergence of life. In this Outlook, we review these recent meteoritic analyses, focusing on variations in abundance, structural distributions, and enantiomeric distributions of amino acids and discussing possible explanations for these observations and the potential for future work.

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Jason P. Dworkin

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Daniel P. Glavin

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Aaron S. Burton

Goddard Space Flight Center

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José C. Aponte

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Stephanie A. Getty

Goddard Space Flight Center

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