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Chondrules in the chondrite classification Grassland. A millimeter scale is shown. Chondrules in the Carbonaceous Chondrite NWA 13887. A chondrule (from Ancient Greek χόνδρος chondros, grain) is a round grain found in a chondrite. Chondrules form as molten or partially molten droplets in space before being accreted to their parent asteroids.
[2] [3] After the classes were devised, a more rigorous definition was found: C-chondrites contain proportionally higher magnesium than ordinary chondrites. [4] [5] [6] The C-chondrites subdivide into CI, CM, CO, CV, CK, CR, and lesser groups (CH, CB, and ungrouped C-meteorites). Specimens are formed into groups by their petrological and ...
As petrologic type increases from type 3.1 through 3.9, profound mineralogical changes occur, starting in the dusty matrix, and then increasingly affecting the coarser-grained components like chondrules. Type 3.9 chondrites still look superficially unchanged because chondrules retain their original appearances, but all of the minerals have been ...
Planetary Nebula: 2.2 Cygnus: 10 C16 NGC 7243 Open Cluster: 2.5 Lacerta: 6.4 C17 NGC 147 Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy: 2,300 Cassiopeia: 9.3 C18 NGC 185 Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy: 2,300 Cassiopeia: 9.2 C19 IC 5146: Cocoon Nebula: Open Cluster and Nebula: 3.3 Cygnus: 7.2 C20 NGC 7000: North America Nebula: Nebula: 2.6 Cygnus: 4 C21 NGC 4449 Irregular ...
List of NGC objects (1–1000) List of NGC objects (1001–2000) List of NGC objects (2001–3000) List of NGC objects (3001–4000) List of NGC objects (4001–5000) List of NGC objects (5001–6000) List of NGC objects (6001–7000) List of NGC objects (7001–7840) List of IC objects; List of Messier objects; List of Caldwell objects
The nebulae listed by Barnard have become known as Barnard objects. [2] A 1919 version of the catalogue listed 182 nebulae; [3] by the time of the posthumously published 1927 version, it listed 369. [4] Barnard's niece and assistant Mary Ross Calvert, also an astronomer and astrographer, took an important part in creating the catalogue. [5]
The RCW Catalogue (from Rodgers, Campbell & Whiteoak) is an astronomical catalogue of Hα-emission regions in the southern Milky Way, described in (Rodgers et al. 1960).It contains 182 objects, including many of the earlier Gum catalogue (84 items) objects.
[3] In 2006 a classification was published that assigned 7 groups to the primitive achondrites, but the classification remains controversial. The authors define primitive achondrites as meteorites "that exceeded their solidus temperature on the parent body" and thus would partially melt. Meteorites that have been fully melted are included if ...