Investigating impact demagnetization through laser impacts and SQUID microscopy
- Jérôme Gattacceca1,
- Michel Boustie2,
- Benjamin P. Weiss3,
- Pierre Rochette4,
- Eduardo A. Lima5,
- Luis E. Fong5 and
- Franz J. Baudenbacher5
- 1CEREGE, CNRS/Université Aix-Marseille 3, France
- 2Laboratoire de Combustion et Détonique, CNRS/ENSMA, Poitiers, France
- 3Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts02139, USA
- 4CEREGE, CNRS/Université Aix-Marseille 3, France
- 5Vanderbilt University, 2201 West End Avenue, Nashville, Tennessee 37235, USA
Abstract
Understanding demagnetization by hypervelocity impacts is crucial for the interpretation of planetary magnetic anomalies and remanent magnetization in meteorites. We describe an innovative approach for investigating the effects of impacts on the remanent magnetization of geologic materials. It consists of the combination of pulsed laser impacts and Superconducting Quantum Interference Device (SQUID) microscopy. Laser impacts are nondestructive, create shocks with peak pressures as high as several hundred GPa, and allow well-calibrated modeling of shock wave propagation within the impacted samples. High-resolution SQUID microscopy quantitatively maps the magnetic field of room-temperature samples with an unprecedented spatial resolution of ∼100 μm. We present shock modeling and magnetic field data obtained for two laser impacts on a magnetite-bearing basalt sample. Magnetic measurements show a demagnetized area at the impact locations. We also show that high-resolution magnetic measurements combined with impact modeling provide a continuous relation between the demagnetization intensity and the peak pressure undergone by the sample. This promising technique will allow for the investigation of the demagnetization behavior of a variety of geological materials upon impacts, with implications for our understanding of the magnetization of extraterrestrial materials and of terrestrial impact structures.
Footnotes
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↵GSA Data Repository item 2006069, Table DR1, Figures DR1–DR3, and modeling videos, is available online at www.geosociety.org/pubs/ft2006.htm, or on request from editing{at}geosociety.org or Documents Secretary, GSA, P.O. Box 9140, Boulder, CO 80301, USA.
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- Accepted 28 November 2005.
- Received 31 May 2005.
- Revision received 27 October 2005.
- Geological Society of America












