NASA finds proof of carbon and water in asteroid Bennu samples
- October 13, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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NASA finds proof of carbon and water in asteroid Bennu samples
Subject: Science and Tech
Section: Space science
Context:
- Initial studies on the samples collected in space and recently brought back on earth from the asteroid Bennu under the OSIRIS-REx mission have shown evidence of high-carbon content and water-bearing clay minerals, according to a statement by National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).
- The practice of retrieving samples from space began in 1969 with NASA’s Apollo 11 mission, the first to land astronauts on the Moon. Many more sample-gathering missions to the Moon and beyond followed, growing in ambition with each passing decade.
Asteroid Bennu:
- Bennu is a small near-Earth asteroid that passes close to Earth every six years.
- It is a 4.5 billion-year-old relic of our solar system’s early days.
- Bennu’s current composition was established within 10 million years of the formation of our solar system.
- OSIRIS-REx:
- The Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, and Security-Regolith Explorer, better known as OSIRIS-REx, is the first United States mission to collect a sample from an asteroid. The spacecraft was launched on September 8, 2016 and the sample was collected three years ago.
- The landing site on Bennu was named: Nightingale.
- The material collected from the asteroid can help us answer big questions about the origins of life and the nature of asteroids.
- Computed topography helped the team create a three-dimensional computer model of one of the particles, highlighting its diverse interior, which provided an early glimpse of evidence of abundant carbon and water.
- NASA will preserve at least 70 per cent of the sample at Johnson Space Center in Houston for further research by scientists globally, including future generations.
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Other space missions that brought back the samples to earth:
- Hayabusa-1 and 2 missions of Japan (JAXA) brought back samples from asteroids Itokawa and Ryugu, respectively.
- China’s Chang’e 5 mission brought lunar samples back in 2020.
Source: DownToEarth