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. 2006 Dec 15;314(5806):1711-6.
doi: 10.1126/science.1135840.

Comet 81P/Wild 2 under a microscope

Don Brownlee  1 Peter TsouJérôme AléonConel M O'd AlexanderTohru ArakiSasa BajtGiuseppe A BarattaRon BastienPhil BlandPierre BleuetJanet BorgJohn P BradleyAdrian BrearleyF BrenkerSean BrennanJohn C BridgesNigel D BrowningJohn R BrucatoE BullockMark J BurchellHenner BusemannAnna ButterworthMarc ChaussidonAllan CheuvrontMiaofang ChiMark J CintalaB C ClarkSimon J ClemettGeorge CodyLuigi ColangeliGeorge CooperPatrick CordierC DaghlianZurong DaiLouis D'HendecourtZahia DjouadiGerardo DominguezTom DuxburyJason P DworkinDenton S EbelThanasis E EconomouSirine FakraSam A J FaireyStewart FallonGianluca FerriniT FerroirHolger FleckensteinChristine FlossGeorge FlynnIan A FranchiMarc FriesZ GainsforthJ-P GallienMatt GengeMary K GillesPhilipe GilletJamie GilmourDaniel P GlavinMatthieu GounelleMonica M GradyGiles A GrahamP G GrantSimon F GreenFaustine GrossemyLawrence GrossmanJeffrey N GrossmanYunbin GuanKenji HagiyaRalph HarveyPhilipp HeckGregory F HerzogPeter HoppeFriedrich HörzJoachim HuthIan D HutcheonKonstantin IgnatyevHope IshiiMotoo ItoDamien JacobChris JacobsenStein JacobsenSteven JonesDavid JoswiakAmy JurewiczAnton T KearsleyLindsay P KellerH KhodjaA L David KilcoyneJochen KisselAlexander KrotFalko LangenhorstAntonio LanzirottiLoan LeLaurie A LeshinJ LeitnerL LemelleHugues LerouxMing-Chang LiuK LueningIan LyonGlen MacphersonMatthew A MarcusKuljeet MarhasBernard MartyGraciela MatrajtKevin McKeeganAnders MeibomVito MennellaKeiko MessengerScott MessengerTakashi MikouchiSmail MostefaouiTomoki NakamuraT NakanoM NewvilleLarry R NittlerIchiro OhnishiKazumasa OhsumiKyoko OkudairaDimitri A PapanastassiouRuss PalmaMaria E PalumboRobert O PepinDavid PerkinsMurielle PerronnetP PianettaWilliam RaoFrans J M RietmeijerFrançois RobertD RostAlessandra RotundiRobert RyanScott A SandfordCraig S SchwandtThomas H SeeDennis SchlutterJ Sheffield-ParkerAlexandre SimionoviciSteven SimonI SitnitskyChristopher J SneadMaegan K SpencerFrank J StadermannAndrew SteeleThomas StephanRhonda StroudJean SusiniS R SuttonY SuzukiMitra TaheriSusan TaylorNick TeslichKazu TomeokaNaotaka TomiokaAlice ToppaniJosep M Trigo-RodríguezDavid TroadecAkira TsuchiyamaAnthony J TuzzolinoTolek TyliszczakK UesugiMichael VelbelJoe VellengaE VicenziL VinczeJack WarrenIris WeberMike WeisbergAndrew J WestphalSue WirickDiane WoodenBrigitte WopenkaPenelope WozniakiewiczIan WrightHikaru YabutaHajime YanoEdward D YoungRichard N ZareThomas ZegaKaren ZieglerLaurent ZimmermanErnst ZinnerMichael Zolensky
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Free article

Comet 81P/Wild 2 under a microscope

Don Brownlee et al. Science. .
Free article

Abstract

The Stardust spacecraft collected thousands of particles from comet 81P/Wild 2 and returned them to Earth for laboratory study. The preliminary examination of these samples shows that the nonvolatile portion of the comet is an unequilibrated assortment of materials that have both presolar and solar system origin. The comet contains an abundance of silicate grains that are much larger than predictions of interstellar grain models, and many of these are high-temperature minerals that appear to have formed in the inner regions of the solar nebula. Their presence in a comet proves that the formation of the solar system included mixing on the grandest scales.

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