Isotopic ratios provide a unique "chemical fingerprint" that is used to compare Earth's water with reservoirs elsewhere in the Solar System. One such isotopic ratio, that of
deuterium to hydrogen (D/H), is particularly useful in the search for the origin of water on Earth. Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe, and its heavier isotope deuterium can sometimes take the place of a hydrogen atom in molecules like H2O. Most deuterium was created in the Big Bang or in supernovae, so its uneven distribution throughout the
protosolar nebula was effectively "locked in" early in the formation of the Solar System. By studying the different isotopic ratios of Earth and of other icy bodies in the Solar System, the likely origins of Earth's water can be researched.
Earth The deuterium to hydrogen ratio for ocean water on Earth is known very precisely to be (1.5576 ± 0.0005) × 10−4. This value represents a mixture of all of the sources that contributed to Earth's reservoirs, and is used to identify the source or sources of Earth's water. The ratio of deuterium to hydrogen has increased over the Earth's lifetime between 2 and 9 times the ratio at the Earth's origin, because the lighter isotope is more likely to leak into space in
atmospheric loss processes. Hydrogen beneath the
Earth's crust is thought to have a D/H ratio more representative of the original D/H ratio upon formation of the Earth, because it is less affected by those processes. Analysis of subsurface hydrogen contained in recently released
lava has been estimated to show that there was a 218
‰ higher D/H ratio in the primordial Earth compared to the current ratio. No process is known that can decrease Earth's D/H ratio over time. This loss of the lighter isotope is one explanation for why
Venus has such a high D/H ratio, as that planet's water was vaporized during the
runaway greenhouse effect and subsequently lost much of its hydrogen to space.
Asteroids Multiple geochemical studies have concluded that asteroids are most likely the primary source of Earth's water.
Carbonaceous chondrites—which are a subclass of the oldest meteorites in the Solar System—have isotopic levels most similar to ocean water. The CI and CM subclasses of carbonaceous chondrites specifically have hydrogen and
nitrogen isotope levels that closely match Earth's seawater, which suggests water in these meteorites could be the source of Earth's oceans. Two 4.5 billion-year-old meteorites found on Earth that contained liquid water alongside a wide diversity of deuterium-poor organic compounds further support this. Earth's current deuterium to hydrogen ratio also matches ancient
eucrite chondrites, which originate from the asteroid
Vesta in the outer asteroid belt. A further asteroid particle study supported the theory that a large source of earth's water has come from hydrogen atoms carried on particles in the
solar wind which combine with oxygen on asteroids and then arrive on earth in space dust. Using atom probe tomography the study found hydroxide and water molecules on the surface of a single grain from particles retrieved from the asteroid
25143 Itokawa by the Japanese space probe
Hayabusa.
Comets Comets are kilometer-sized bodies made of dust and ice that originate from the
Kuiper belt (20-50 AU) and the
Oort cloud (>5,000 AU), but have highly elliptical orbits which bring them into the inner solar system. Their icy composition and trajectories which bring them into the inner solar system make them a target for remote and
in situ measurements of D/H ratios. It is implausible that Earth's water originated only from comets, since isotope measurements of the deuterium to hydrogen (D/H) ratio in comets
Halley,
Hyakutake,
Hale–Bopp,
2002T7, and
Tuttle, yield values approximately twice that of oceanic water. This is also supported by analysis using the comparison of isotopic ratios for both carbon and nitrogen isotopes, which attribute only a few percent of the water present on earth to comet sources, indicating a much higher reliance on incoming asteroid matter. Using the cometary D/H ratio, models predict that less than 10% of Earth's water was supplied from comets. Other, shorter period comets (<20 years) called Jupiter family comets likely originate from the Kuiper belt, but have had their orbital paths influenced by gravitational interactions with Jupiter or Neptune.
67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko is one such comet that was the subject of isotopic measurements by the
Rosetta spacecraft, which found the comet has a D/H ratio three times that of Earth's seawater. Another Jupiter family comet,
103P/Hartley 2, has a D/H ratio which is consistent with Earth's seawater, but its nitrogen isotope levels do not match Earth's. ==See also==