A scanning electron microscope image of a
micrometeorite impact crater in a particle of asteroid Bennu material.
Credits: NASA/Zia Rahman
Asteroid Bennu, sampled by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission in 2020, is a mixture
of dust that formed in our solar system, organic matter from interstellar
space, and pre-solar system stardust. Its unique and varied contents were
dramatically transformed over time by interactions with water and exposure to
the harsh space environment.
These insights come from a trio of
newly published papers based on the analysis of Bennu samples by scientists at
NASA and other institutions.
Bennu is made of fragments from a
larger parent asteroid destroyed by a collision in the asteroid belt, between
the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. One of the papers, co-led by Jessica Barnes at
the University of Arizona, Tucson, and Ann Nguyen of NASA’s Johnson Space
Center in Houston and published in the journal Nature
Astronomy, suggests
that Bennu’s ancestor was made up of material that had diverse origins—near the
Sun, far from the Sun, and even beyond our solar system.
The analyses show that some of the
materials in the parent asteroid, despite very low odds, escaped various
chemical processes driven by heat and water and even survived the extremely
energetic collision that broke it apart and formed Bennu.
“We traced the origins of these
initial materials accumulated by Bennu’s ancestor,” said Nguyen. “We found
stardust grains with compositions that predate the solar system, organic matter
that likely formed in interstellar space, and high temperature minerals that
formed closer to the Sun. All of these constituents were transported great
distances to the region that Bennu’s parent asteroid formed.”
The chemical and atomic
similarities of samples from Bennu, the asteroid Ryugu (sampled by JAXA’s (the
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) Hayabusa2 mission) and the most chemically
primitive meteorites collected on Earth suggest their parent asteroids may have
formed in a similar, distant region of the early solar system. Yet the
differences from Ryugu and meteorites that were seen in the Bennu samples may
indicate that this region changed over time or did not mix as well as some
scientists have thought. 
“We found stardust grains with compositions that predate the solar system,
organic matter that likely formed in interstellar space, and high temperature
minerals that formed closer to the Sun.
Ann Nguyen
Planetary Scientist
Though some original constituents
survived, most of Bennu’s materials were transformed by reactions with water,
as reported in the paper co-led by Tom Zega of the University of Arizona and
Tim McCoy of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History in Washington
and published in Nature Geoscience. In fact, minerals in the parent asteroid likely formed, dissolved, and
reformed over time.
“Bennu’s parent asteroid accumulated ice
and dust. Eventually that ice melted, and the resulting liquid reacted with the
dust to form what we see today, a sample that is 80% minerals that contain
water,” said Zega. “We think the parent asteroid accumulated a lot of icy
material from the outer solar system, and then all it needed was a little bit
of heat to melt the ice and cause liquids to react with solids.”
Bennu’s transformation did not end
there. The third paper, co-led by Lindsay Keller at NASA Johnson and Michelle
Thompson of Purdue University, also published in Nature Geoscience, found microscopic
craters and tiny splashes of once-molten rock – known as impact melts – on the
sample surfaces, signs that the asteroid was bombarded by micrometeorites.
These impacts, together with the effects of solar wind, are known as space
weathering and occurred because Bennu has no atmosphere to protect it.
“The surface weathering at Bennu is happening a lot faster than conventional wisdom would have it, and the impact melt mechanism appears to dominate, contrary to what we originally thought,” said Keller. “Space weathering is an important process that affects all asteroids, and with returned samples, we can tease out the properties controlling it and use that data and extrapolate it to explain the surface and evolution of asteroid bodies that we haven’t visited.”
Ann Nguyen, co-lead author of a new paper that gives
insights into the diverse origin of asteroid Bennu’s “parent” asteroid works
alongside the NanoSIMS 50L (nanoscale secondary ion mass spectrometry) ion
microprobe in the Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science Division at
NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston.
Credit: NASA/James Blair
As the leftover materials from planetary formation 4.5 billion years ago,
asteroids provide a record of the solar system’s history. But as Zega noted,
we're seeing that some of these remnants differ from what has been found in
meteorites on Earth, because certain types of asteroids burn up in the
atmosphere and never make it to the ground. That, the researchers point out, is
why collecting actual samples is so important.
“The samples are really crucial for
this work,” Barnes said. “We could only get the answers we got because of the
samples. It's super exciting that we're finally able to see these things about
an asteroid that we've been dreaming of going to for so long.”
The next samples NASA expects to
help unravel our solar system’s story will be Moon rocks returned by the
Artemis III astronauts.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
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. 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 the Canadian Space Agency and
asteroid sample science collaboration with JAXA’s Hayabusa2 mission. OSIRIS-REx
is the third mission in NASA's New Frontiers Program, managed by NASA's
Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, for the agency's Science
Mission Directorate in Washington.
Melissa Gaskill
Johnson Space Center
For more information on NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission, visit: https://science.nasa.gov/mission/osiris-rex/
Source: NASA’s Bennu Samples Reveal Complex Origins, Dramatic Transformation - NASA Science


 
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