Scientists release first analysis of rocks plucked from speeding asteroid
by Louise Lerner, University of Chicago
After a six-year journey, a plucky spacecraft called Hayabusa2 zinged
back into Earth’s atmosphere in late 2020 and landed deep in the
Australian outback. When researchers from the Japanese space agency JAXA
opened it, they found its precious payload sealed and intact: a handful
of dirt that Hayabusa2 managed to scoop off the surface of a speeding
asteroid.
Scientists have now begun to announce the first results from the analysis of this extraordinary sample. What they found suggests that this asteroid is a piece of the same stuff that coalesced into our sun four-and-a-half billion years ago.
“We previously only had a handful of
these rocks to study, and all of them were meteorites that fell to Earth
and were stored in museums for decades to centuries, which changed
their compositions,” said geochemist Nicolas Dauphas, one of the three
University of Chicago researchers who worked with a Japan-led
international team of scientists to analyze the fragments. “Having
pristine samples from outer space is simply incredible. They are
witnesses from parts of the solar system that we have not otherwise
explored." …