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Browsing by Author "Auge, Basile"

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    Irradiation of nitrogen-rich ices by swift heavy ions: clues for the formation of ultracarbonaceous micrometeorites
    (2015) Mejía Guamán, Christian Fernando; Martinez Rodrigues, Rafael; Dartois, Emmanuel; Vignoli Muniz, Gabriel S.; Engrand, Cecile; Godard, Marie; Delauche, L.; Auge, Basile; Bardin, Nathalie; Rothard, H.; Boduch, Philippe; Domaracka, Alicja; Duprat, Jean
    Context. Extraterrestrial materials, such as meteorites and interplanetary dust particles, provide constraints on the formation and evolution of organic matter in the young solar system. Micrometeorites represent the dominant source of extraterrestrial matter at the Earth’s surface, some of them originating from large heliocentric distances. Recent analyses of ultracarbonaceous micrometeorites recovered from Antarctica (UCAMMs) reveal an unusually nitrogen-rich organic matter. Such nitrogen-rich carbonaceous material could be formed in a N2-rich environment, at very low temperature, triggered by energetic processes. Aims. Several formation scenarios have been proposed for the formation of the N-rich organic matter observed in UCAMMs. We experimentally evaluate the scenario involving high energy irradiation of icy bodies subsurface orbiting at large heliocentric distances. Methods. The effect of Galactic cosmic ray (GCR) irradiation of ices containing N2 and CH4 was studied in the laboratory. The N2-CH4 (90:10 and 98:2) ice mixtures were irradiated at 14 K by 44 MeV Ni11+ and 160 MeV Ar15+ swift heavy ion beams. The evolution of the samples was monitored using in-situ Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The evolution of the initial ice molecules and new species formed were followed as a function of projectile fluence. After irradiation, the target was annealed to room temperature. The solid residue of the whole process left after ice sublimation was characterized in-situ by infrared spectroscopy, and the elemental composition was measured ex-situ. Results. The infrared bands that appear during irradiation allow us to identify molecules and radicals (HCN, CN−, NH3, ...). The infrared spectra of the solid residues measured at room temperature show similarities with that of UCAMMs. The results point towards the efficient production of a poly-HCN-like residue from the irradiation of N2-CH4 rich surfaces of icy bodies. The room temperature residue provides a viable precursor for the N-rich organic matter found in UCAMMs.
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    Radioresistance of adenine to cosmic rays
    (2017) Domaracka, Alicja; Rothard, Hermann; Vignoli Muniz, Gabriel S.; Mejía Guamán, Christian Fernando; Martinez, Rafael; Auge, Basile; Boduch, Philippe
    The presence of nucleobases in carbonaceous meteorites on Earth is an indication of the existence of this class of molecules in outer space. However, space is permeated by ionizing radiation, which can have damaging effects on these molecules. Adenine is a purine nucleobase that amalgamates important biomolecules such as DNA, RNA, and ATP. Adenine has a unique importance in biochemistry and therefore life. The aim of this work was to study the effects of cosmic ray analogues on solid adenine and estimate its survival when exposed to corpuscular radiation. Adenine films were irradiated at GANIL (Caen, France) and GSI (Darmstadt, Germany) by 820 MeV Kr³³⁺, 190 MeV Ca¹⁰⁺, 92 MeV Xe²³⁺, and 12 MeV C⁴⁺ ion beams at low temperature. The evolution of adenine molecules under heavy ion irradiation was studied by IR absorption spectroscopy as a function of projectile fluence. It was found that the adenine destruction cross section (σd) follows an electronic stopping power (Se) power law under the form: CSeⁿ; C is a constant, and the exponential n is a dimensionless quantity. Using the equation above to fit our results, we determined σd = 4 × 10⁻¹⁷ Se1.17, with Se in kiloelectronvolts per micrometer (keV μm⁻¹). New IR absorption bands arise under irradiation of adenine and can be attributed to HCN, CN⁻, C2H4N4, CH3CN, and (CH3)3CNC. These findings may help to understand the stability and chemistry related to complex organic molecules in space. The half-life of solid adenine exposed to the simulated interstellar medium cosmic ray flux was estimated as (10 ± 8) × 10⁶ years.

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