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Dr. Klaus Keil
Office: POST 509B
Email: keil@hawaii.edu
Phone Number: (808)
956-7755
Fax Number: (808)
956-6322
Cell phone: (808) 348-0717
Hawaii Institute
of
Geophysics and Planetology,
School of
Ocean and
Earth
Science and
Technology (SOEST),
University of
Hawaii at
Manoa
1618 East-West Road
Honolulu, Hawaii
96822
USA
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I am
interested
in the origin of solid materials in the solar
nebula early in the
history
of the solar system, and the subsequent
accretion into, and evolution
of,
planetesimals and asteroids. I also study the
origin and evolution of
Earth's
Moon and the planet Mars. This research is
carried out on meteorites
from
asteroids, Moon and Mars, and on returned lunar
samples. The aim of my
research is to understand the processes that
took place in the solar
nebula,
and the nature of the alterations that these
materials underwent in the
nebula. I am also interested in the evolution of
asteroids, including
the
complex processes of aqueous alteration, thermal
metamorphism, and
partial
and complete melting. One large area of my
research is aimed at
understanding
the evolution of crusts, mantles and cores of
differentiated asteroids
and the vast array of igneous processes that may
have taken place on
these
bodies, including volcanism and pyroclastic
eruptions and their
consequences.
I employ optical microscopy, electron microprobe
analysis and scanning
electron microscopy to the study of these rocks,
and I collaborate with
scientists from other institutions employing
additional analytical
tools
such as ion microprobe techniques.
- Résumé:
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