In this video frame, Jason Dworkin holds up a vial
that contains part of the sample from asteroid Bennu delivered to Earth by
NASA’s OSIRIS-REx (Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification,
and Security – Regolith Explorer) mission in 2023. Dworkin is the mission’s
project scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
Credit: NASA/James Tralie
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Studies of rock and dust from
asteroid Bennu delivered to Earth by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx (Origins, Spectral
Interpretation, Resource Identification and Security–Regolith Explorer)
spacecraft have revealed molecules that, on our planet, are key to life, as well
as a history of saltwater that could have served as the “broth” for these
compounds to interact and combine.
The findings do not show evidence
for life itself, but they do suggest the conditions necessary for the emergence
of life were widespread across the early solar system, increasing the odds life
could have formed on other planets and moons.
“NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission already
is rewriting the textbook on what we understand about the beginnings of our
solar system,” said Nicky Fox, associate administrator, Science Mission
Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “Asteroids provide a time
capsule into our home planet’s history, and Bennu’s samples are pivotal in our
understanding of what ingredients in our solar system existed before life
started on Earth.”
In research papers published
Wednesday in the journals Nature and Nature Astronomy, scientists from NASA and
other institutions shared results of the first in-depth analyses of the
minerals and molecules in the Bennu samples, which OSIRIS-REx delivered to
Earth in 2023.
Detailed in the Nature Astronomy
paper, among the most compelling detections were amino acids – 14 of the 20
that life on Earth uses to make proteins – and all five nucleobases that life
on Earth uses to store and transmit genetic instructions in more complex
terrestrial biomolecules, such as DNA and RNA, including how to arrange amino
acids into proteins.
Scientists also described
exceptionally high abundances of ammonia in the Bennu samples. Ammonia is
important to biology because it can react with formaldehyde, which also was
detected in the samples, to form complex molecules, such as amino acids – given
the right conditions. When amino acids link up into long chains, they make
proteins, which go on to power nearly every biological function.
These building blocks for life
detected in the Bennu samples have been found before in extraterrestrial rocks.
However, identifying them in a pristine sample collected in space supports the
idea that objects that formed far from the Sun could have been an important
source of the raw precursor ingredients for life throughout the solar system.
“The clues we’re looking for are so
minuscule and so easily destroyed or altered from exposure to Earth’s
environment,” said Danny Glavin, a senior sample scientist at NASA’s Goddard
Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and co-lead author of the Nature
Astronomy paper. “That’s why some of these new discoveries would not be possible without a
sample-return mission, meticulous contamination-control measures, and careful
curation and storage of this precious material from Bennu.”
While Glavin’s team analyzed the
Bennu samples for hints of life-related compounds, their colleagues, led by Tim
McCoy, curator of meteorites at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural
History in Washington, and Sara Russell, cosmic mineralogist at the Natural
History Museum in London, looked for clues to the environment these molecules
would have formed. Reporting
in the journal Nature, scientists further describe evidence of an ancient environment
well-suited to kickstart the chemistry of life.
Ranging from calcite to halite and
sylvite, scientists identified traces of 11 minerals in the Bennu sample that
form as water containing dissolved salts evaporates over long periods of time,
leaving behind the salts as solid crystals.
Similar brines have been detected
or suggested across the solar system, including at the dwarf planet Ceres and
Saturn’s moon Enceladus.
Although scientists have previously
detected several evaporites in meteorites that fall to Earth’s surface, they
have never seen a complete set that preserves an evaporation process that could
have lasted thousands of years or more. Some minerals found in Bennu, such as
trona, were discovered for the first time in extraterrestrial samples.
“These papers really go hand in
hand in trying to explain how life’s ingredients actually came together to make
what we see on this aqueously altered asteroid,” said McCoy.
For all the answers the Bennu
sample has provided, several questions remain. Many amino acids can be created
in two mirror-image versions, like a pair of left and right hands. Life on
Earth almost exclusively produces the left-handed variety, but the Bennu
samples contain an equal mixture of both. This means that on early Earth, amino
acids may have started out in an equal mixture, as well. The reason life
“turned left” instead of right remains a mystery.
“OSIRIS-REx has been a highly
successful mission,” said Jason Dworkin, OSIRIS-REx project scientist at NASA
Goddard and co-lead author on the Nature Astronomy paper. “Data from OSIRIS-REx
adds major brushstrokes to a picture of a solar system teeming with the
potential for life. Why we, so far, only see life on Earth and not elsewhere,
that’s the truly tantalizing question.”
NASA Goddard provided overall
mission management, systems engineering, and the safety and mission assurance
for OSIRIS-REx. Dante Lauretta of the University of Arizona, Tucson, is the
principal investigator. The university leads the science team and the mission’s
science observation planning and data processing. Lockheed Martin Space in
Littleton, Colorado, built the spacecraft and provided flight operations. NASA
Goddard and KinetX Aerospace were responsible for navigating the OSIRIS-REx
spacecraft. Curation for OSIRIS-REx takes place at NASA’s Johnson Space Center
in Houston. International partnerships on this mission include the OSIRIS-REx
Laser Altimeter instrument from CSA (Canadian Space Agency) and asteroid sample
science collaboration with JAXA’s (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency)
Hayabusa2 mission. OSIRIS-REx is the third mission in NASA’s New Frontiers
Program, managed by the agency’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville,
Alabama, for the agency’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington.
For more information on the OSIRIS-REx mission, visit: https://www.nasa.gov/osiris-rex
Source: NASA’s Asteroid Bennu Sample Reveals Mix of Life’s Ingredients - NASA
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