WATER FOUND IN SAMPLES FROM THE SURFACE OF AN ASTEROID
The Japanese space probe Hayabusa completed a
sample return mission from the asteroid Itokawa.
Scientists have made the first measurements
of water in samples collected from the surface of an asteroid, according to a
new study.
The Japanese space probe Hayabusa completed a
sample return mission from the asteroid Itokawa, retrieving 1,500 particles. Another
mission, Hayabusa2, is conducting a sample return mission on the asteroid
Ryugu.
A study detailing the analysis of five of the
particles from the asteroid samples was published Wednesday in the journal
Science Advances. The samples were collected from an area on Itokawa known as
the Muses Sea, which is smooth and dusty.
"We found the samples we examined were
enriched in water compared to the average for inner solar system objects,"
said Ziliang Jin, lead study author and postdoctoral scholar in Arizona State
University's School of Earth and Space Exploration, in a statement.
Each sample is only about half the thickness
of a human hair, so an ion mass spectrometer was used to study the tiny mineral
grains.
There was no intention to study the samples
for evidence of water until two researchers from Arizona State, Jin and
Maitrayee Bose, proposed it.
In two of the five particles, Jin and Bose
found pyroxene, a mineral that is known to contain water. Further study showed
that the samples were rich in water, even though Itokawa is dry.
Itokawa is an S-type asteroid, one of the
most common objects found in the asteroid belt. Even though these objects are
on the small side, they also maintain the materials they formed with.
"They originally formed at a distance
from the Sun of one-third to three times Earth's distance," Bose said.
Itokawa is shaped like a peanut and completes
an orbit around the sun every 18 months, swinging through Earth's orbit and
then going beyond Mars. The asteroid is 1,800 feet long and between 700 and
1,000 feet wide.
The asteroid looks like a pile of rubble
being held together by force. It's a fragment of a much larger body that was
once 12 miles wide, but it went through some rough changes. At one point, it
encountered high temperatures that heated it to 1,000 or 1,500 degrees
Fahrenheit. Multiple impacts eventually shattered it.
Two of the fragments, known as lobes, merged
about 8 million years ago. The researchers believe that the samples were buried
at least 328 feet inside the much larger parent body before it broke apart.
When the asteroid broke into pieces, it's
likely that the sample grains were exposed to radiation and impacts by
micrometeorites. And yet, they retain water. The minerals are also similar in
composition to those found on Earth.
"This means S-type asteroids and the
parent bodies of [non-modified asteroids] are likely a critical source of water
and several other elements for the terrestrial planets," Bose said.
"That makes these asteroids high-priority targets for exploration."
The two researchers estimate that asteroids
like this impacting Earth early in its history could have delivered as much as
half of our ocean water, according to the study.
This tells us not only about planets in our
own solar system but about what else we might find outside it.
"Sample-return missions are mandatory if
we really want to do an in-depth study of planetary objects," Bose said.
"The Hayabusa mission to Itokawa has expanded our knowledge of the
volatile contents of the bodies that helped form Earth. It would not be
surprising if a similar mechanism of water production is common for rocky
exoplanets around other stars."
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