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Featured researches published by Takaaki Noguchi.


Science | 2011

Itokawa Dust Particles: A Direct Link Between S-Type Asteroids and Ordinary Chondrites

Tomoki Nakamura; Takaaki Noguchi; Masahiko Tanaka; Michael E. Zolensky; Makoto Kimura; Akira Tsuchiyama; Aiko Nakato; Toshihiro Ogami; Hatsumi Ishida; Masayuki Uesugi; Toru Yada; Kei Shirai; Akio Fujimura; Ryuji Okazaki; Scott A. Sandford; Yukihiro Ishibashi; Masanao Abe; Tatsuaki Okada; Munetaka Ueno; T. Mukai; Makoto Yoshikawa; Junichiro Kawaguchi

Laboratory analysis of samples returned from an asteroid establishes a direct link between asteroids and meteorites and provides clues to the complex history of the asteroid and its surface. The Hayabusa spacecraft successfully recovered dust particles from the surface of near-Earth asteroid 25143 Itokawa. Synchrotron-radiation x-ray diffraction and transmission and scanning electron microscope analyses indicate that the mineralogy and mineral chemistry of the Itokawa dust particles are identical to those of thermally metamorphosed LL chondrites, consistent with spectroscopic observations made from Earth and by the Hayabusa spacecraft. Our results directly demonstrate that ordinary chondrites, the most abundant meteorites found on Earth, come from S-type asteroids. Mineral chemistry indicates that the majority of regolith surface particles suffered long-term thermal annealing and subsequent impact shock, suggesting that Itokawa is an asteroid made of reassembled pieces of the interior portions of a once larger asteroid.


Science | 2011

Three-Dimensional Structure of Hayabusa Samples: Origin and Evolution of Itokawa Regolith

Akira Tsuchiyama; Masayuki Uesugi; Takashi Matsushima; Tatsuhiro Michikami; Toshihiko Kadono; Tomoki Nakamura; Kentaro Uesugi; Tsukasa Nakano; Scott A. Sandford; Ryo Noguchi; T. Matsumoto; Junya Matsuno; Takashi Nagano; Y. Imai; Akihisa Takeuchi; Yoshio Suzuki; Toshihiro Ogami; Jun Katagiri; Mitsuru Ebihara; Trevor R. Ireland; Fumio Kitajima; Keisuke Nagao; Hiroshi Naraoka; Takaaki Noguchi; Ryuji Okazaki; Hisayoshi Yurimoto; Michael E. Zolensky; T. Mukai; Masanao Abe; Toru Yada

Laboratory analysis of samples returned from an asteroid establishes a direct link between asteroids and meteorites and provides clues to the complex history of the asteroid and its surface. Regolith particles on the asteroid Itokawa were recovered by the Hayabusa mission. Their three-dimensional (3D) structure and other properties, revealed by x-ray microtomography, provide information on regolith formation. Modal abundances of minerals, bulk density (3.4 grams per cubic centimeter), and the 3D textures indicate that the particles represent a mixture of equilibrated and less-equilibrated LL chondrite materials. Evidence for melting was not seen on any of the particles. Some particles have rounded edges. Overall, the particles’ size and shape are different from those seen in particles from the lunar regolith. These features suggest that meteoroid impacts on the asteroid surface primarily form much of the regolith particle, and that seismic-induced grain motion in the smooth terrain abrades them over time.


Science | 2011

Incipient Space Weathering Observed on the Surface of Itokawa Dust Particles

Takaaki Noguchi; Tomoki Nakamura; Makoto Kimura; Michael E. Zolensky; Masahiko Tanaka; Takahito Hashimoto; Mitsuru Konno; Aiko Nakato; Toshihiro Ogami; Akio Fujimura; Masanao Abe; Toru Yada; T. Mukai; Munetaka Ueno; Takashi Okada; Kei Shirai; Yukihiro Ishibashi; Ryuji Okazaki

Laboratory analysis of samples returned from an asteroid establishes a direct link between asteroids and meteorites and provides clues to the complex history of the asteroid and its surface. The reflectance spectra of the most abundant meteorites, ordinary chondrites, are different from those of the abundant S-type (mnemonic for siliceous) asteroids. This discrepancy has been thought to be due to space weathering, which is an alteration of the surfaces of airless bodies exposed to the space environment. Here we report evidence of space weathering on particles returned from the S-type asteroid 25143 Itokawa by the Hayabusa spacecraft. Surface modification was found in 5 out of 10 particles, which varies depending on mineral species. Sulfur-bearing Fe-rich nanoparticles exist in a thin (5 to 15 nanometers) surface layer on olivine, low-Ca pyroxene, and plagioclase, which is suggestive of vapor deposition. Sulfur-free Fe-rich nanoparticles exist deeper inside (<60 nanometers) ferromagnesian silicates. Their texture suggests formation by metamictization and in situ reduction of Fe2+.


Science | 2011

Oxygen Isotopic Compositions of Asteroidal Materials Returned from Itokawa by the Hayabusa Mission

Hisayoshi Yurimoto; Kenichi Abe; Masanao Abe; Mitsuru Ebihara; Akio Fujimura; Minako Hashiguchi; Ko Hashizume; Trevor R. Ireland; Shoichi Itoh; Juri Katayama; Chizu Kato; Junichiro Kawaguchi; Noriyuki Kawasaki; Fumio Kitajima; Sachio Kobayashi; Tatsuji Meike; T. Mukai; Keisuke Nagao; Tomoki Nakamura; Hiroshi Naraoka; Takaaki Noguchi; Ryuji Okazaki; Changkun Park; Naoya Sakamoto; Yusuke Seto; Masashi Takei; Akira Tsuchiyama; Masayuki Uesugi; Shigeyuki Wakaki; Toru Yada

Laboratory analysis of samples returned from an asteroid establishes a direct link between asteroids and meteorites and provides clues to the complex history of the asteroid and its surface. Meteorite studies suggest that each solar system object has a unique oxygen isotopic composition. Chondrites, the most primitive of meteorites, have been believed to be derived from asteroids, but oxygen isotopic compositions of asteroids themselves have not been established. We measured, using secondary ion mass spectrometry, oxygen isotopic compositions of rock particles from asteroid 25143 Itokawa returned by the Hayabusa spacecraft. Compositions of the particles are depleted in 16O relative to terrestrial materials and indicate that Itokawa, an S-type asteroid, is one of the sources of the LL or L group of equilibrated ordinary chondrites. This is a direct oxygen-isotope link between chondrites and their parent asteroid.


Science | 2011

Irradiation History of Itokawa Regolith Material Deduced from Noble Gases in the Hayabusa Samples

Keisuke Nagao; Ryuji Okazaki; Tomoki Nakamura; Yayoi N. Miura; Takahito Osawa; Ken Ichi Bajo; Shintaro Matsuda; Mitsuru Ebihara; Trevor R. Ireland; Fumio Kitajima; Hiroshi Naraoka; Takaaki Noguchi; Akira Tsuchiyama; Hisayoshi Yurimoto; Michael E. Zolensky; Masayuki Uesugi; Kei Shirai; Masanao Abe; Toru Yada; Yukihiro Ishibashi; Akio Fujimura; T. Mukai; Munetaka Ueno; Tatsuaki Okada; Makoto Yoshikawa; Junichiro Kawaguchi

Laboratory analysis of samples returned from an asteroid establishes a direct link between asteroids and meteorites and provides clues to the complex history of the asteroid and its surface. Noble gas isotopes were measured in three rocky grains from asteroid Itokawa to elucidate a history of irradiation from cosmic rays and solar wind on its surface. Large amounts of solar helium (He), neon (Ne), and argon (Ar) trapped in various depths in the grains were observed, which can be explained by multiple implantations of solar wind particles into the grains, combined with preferential He loss caused by frictional wear of space-weathered rims on the grains. Short residence time of less than 8 million years was implied for the grains by an estimate on cosmic-ray–produced 21Ne. Our results suggest that Itokawa is continuously losing its surface materials into space at a rate of tens of centimeters per million years. The lifetime of Itokawa should be much shorter than the age of our solar system.


Science | 2011

Neutron Activation Analysis of a Particle Returned from Asteroid Itokawa

Mitsuru Ebihara; S. Sekimoto; Naoki Shirai; Yasunori Hamajima; M. Yamamoto; K. Kumagai; Y. Oura; Trevor R. Ireland; Fumio Kitajima; Keisuke Nagao; Tomoki Nakamura; Hiroshi Naraoka; Takaaki Noguchi; Ryuji Okazaki; Akira Tsuchiyama; Masayuki Uesugi; Hisayoshi Yurimoto; Michael E. Zolensky; Masanao Abe; Akio Fujimura; T. Mukai; Y. Yada

Laboratory analysis of samples returned from an asteroid establishes a direct link between asteroids and meteorites and provides clues to the complex history of the asteroid and its surface. A single grain (~3 micrograms) returned by the Hayabusa spacecraft was analyzed by neutron activation analysis. This grain is mainly composed of olivine with minor amounts of plagioclase, troilite, and metal. Our results establish that the Itokawa sample has similar chemical characteristics (iron/scandium and nickel/cobalt ratios) to chondrites, confirming that this grain is extraterrestrial in origin and has primitive chemical compositions. Estimated iridium/nickel and iridium/cobalt ratios for metal in the Itokawa samples are about five times lower than CI carbonaceous chondrite values. A similar depletion of iridium was observed in chondrule metals of ordinary chondrites. These metals must have condensed from the nebular where refractory siderophile elements already condensed and were segregated.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Deep-sea record of impact apparently unrelated to mass extinction in the Late Triassic

Tetsuji Onoue; Honami Sato; Tomoki Nakamura; Takaaki Noguchi; Yoshihiro Hidaka; Naoki Shirai; Mitsuru Ebihara; Takahito Osawa; Y. Hatsukawa; Yosuke Toh; M. Koizumi; H. Harada; Michael J. Orchard; Munetomo Nedachi

The 34-million-year (My) interval of the Late Triassic is marked by the formation of several large impact structures on Earth. Late Triassic impact events have been considered a factor in biotic extinction events in the Late Triassic (e.g., end-Triassic extinction event), but this scenario remains controversial because of a lack of stratigraphic records of ejecta deposits. Here, we report evidence for an impact event (platinum group elements anomaly with nickel-rich magnetite and microspherules) from the middle Norian (Upper Triassic) deep-sea sediment in Japan. This includes anomalously high abundances of iridium, up to 41.5 parts per billion (ppb), in the ejecta deposit, which suggests that the iridium-enriched ejecta layers of the Late Triassic may be found on a global scale. The ejecta deposit is constrained by microfossils that suggest correlation with the 215.5-Mya, 100-km-wide Manicouagan impact crater in Canada. Our analysis of radiolarians shows no evidence of a mass extinction event across the impact event horizon, and no contemporaneous faunal turnover is seen in other marine planktons. However, such an event has been reported among marine faunas and terrestrial tetrapods and floras in North America. We, therefore, suggest that the Manicouagan impact triggered the extinction of terrestrial and marine organisms near the impact site but not within the pelagic marine realm.


Earth, Planets and Space | 2015

Mineralogy and noble gas isotopes of micrometeorites collected from Antarctic snow

Ryuji Okazaki; Takaaki Noguchi; Shin Ichi Tsujimoto; Yu Tobimatsu; Tomoki Nakamura; Mitsuru Ebihara; S.-I. Itoh; Hiroko Nagahara; Shogo Tachibana; Kentaro Terada; Hikaru Yabuta

We have investigated seven micrometeorites (MMs) from Antarctic snow collected in 2003 and 2010 by means of electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, micro-Raman spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) observation, and noble-gas isotope analysis. Isotopic ratios of He and Ne indicate that the noble gases in these MMs are mostly of solar wind (SW). Based on the release patterns of SW 4He, which should reflect the degree of heating during atmospheric entry, the seven MMs were classified into three types including two least heated, three moderately heated, and two severely heated MMs. The heating degrees are well correlated to their mineralogical features determined by TEM observation. One of the least heated MMs is composed of phyllosilicates, whereas the other consists of anhydrous minerals within which solar flare tracks were observed. The two severely heated MMs show clear evidence of atmospheric heating such as partial melt of the uppermost surface layer in one and abundant patches of dendritic magnetite and Si-rich glass within an olivine grain in the other. It is noteworthy that a moderately heated MM composed of a single crystal of olivine has a 3He/4He ratio of 8.44 × 10−4, which is higher than the SW value of 4.64 × 10−4, but does not show a cosmogenic 21Ne signature such as 20Ne/21Ne/22Ne = 12.83/0.0284/1. The isotopic compositions of He and Ne in this sample cannot be explained by mixing of a galactic cosmic ray (GCR)-produced component and SW gases. The high 3He/4He ratio without cosmogenic 21Ne signature likely indicates the presence of a 3He-enriched component derived from solar energetic particles.


Earth, Planets and Space | 2014

Mineralogy of four Itokawa particles collected from the first touchdown site

Takaaki Noguchi; John C. Bridges; L. J. Hicks; S. J. Gurman; Makoto Kimura; Takahito Hashimoto; Mitsuru Konno; John P. Bradley; Ryuji Okazaki; Masayuki Uesugi; Toru Yada; Yuzuru Karouji; Masanao Abe; Tatsuaki Okada; Takuya Mitsunari; Tomoki Nakamura; Hiroyuki Kagi

Four Itokawa particles collected from the first touchdown site were mineralogically investigated by optical microscopy, micro-Raman (μ-Raman) spectrometry, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), electron microprobe analysis (EPMA), X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Their mineralogy has an affinity to that of LL6 chondrites based on micro-Raman spectroscopy, EPMA, and XAS analyses. However, the space weathering rims on them are less developed than those observed on the Itokawa particles collected from the second touchdown site. Solar flare tracks are rarely observed in the four particles, whose number densities were lower than those observed in the Itokawa particles from the second touchdown site.


American Mineralogist | 2012

Kinetics of evaporation of forsterite in vacuum

Kazuhito Ozawa; Hiroko Nagahara; Masana Morioka; Naoko Matsumoto; Ian D. Hutcheon; Takaaki Noguchi; Hiroyuki Kagi

Abstract Congruent evaporation of a crystalline material in vacuum is an extreme reaction in that backward reactions and transport processes in the reactant can be neglected. The evaporation is strongly governed by surface processes and intrinsic nature of the substance. A thorough knowledge of the atomistic evaporation mechanism is fundamental for better understanding reaction kinetics between gas and condensed materials in general. We have conducted a series of evaporation experiments of forsterite in vacuum for crystallographically oriented surfaces at 1500 to 1810 °C. The (100), (010), and (001) surfaces developed their own morphology characterized by evaporation pits and grooves originated from dislocation outcrops. Nominal overall evaporation rate (average retreat rate of a surface) shows significant anisotropy with the maximum difference by a factor of five below 1740 °C. The overall evaporation rates for individual surfaces are fitted with respective Arrhenius relationships, giving the highest activation energy for (100), intermediate for (001), and the lowest for (010). The anisotropy decreases to within 50% at ~1800 °C, which is caused by enhancement of evaporation from (010) owing to preferential evaporation around dislocation outcrops. “Intrinsic evaporation rates” estimated by subtracting contributions of initial roughness and the preferential evaporation around dislocations from the nominal overall evaporation rates show substantial anisotropy even at ~1800 °C. The “intrinsic evaporation rate” for (010) is adequately fitted by an Arrhenius relationship over the examined temperature range giving a single activation energy of 655 kJ/mol. The prevalence of steps with submicrometer to nanometer-scale height shows that forsterite evaporates mostly by layer-by-layer mechanism. The only exception is the (001) surface above ~1650 °C, on which such steps are absent except for surface-parallel minor facets which are rapidly diminishing with time. The (001) surface is inferred to evaporate by direct detachment mechanism at high temperatures. The change of evaporation mechanisms for (001) at around 1650 °C corresponds to a rough-smooth transition kinetically induced by an atomistic evaporation process.

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Masanao Abe

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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Akio Fujimura

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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Toru Yada

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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Mitsuru Ebihara

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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Masayuki Uesugi

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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Kei Shirai

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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Junichiro Kawaguchi

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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