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Astronomie - Surprisingly wet asteroid dust could spark a rethink of Earths water

2.05.2019

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Dust from asteroid Itokawa contains more water than expected

JAXA

Earth may have formed with its water baked in. Samples of dust from an asteroid revealed an unexpectedly high amount of water, and asteroids like it may have been the building blocks that made our planet.

In 2003, the Japanese spacecraft Hayabusa was launched toward the 500-metre-wide asteroid Itokawa. When it came back to Earth seven years later, it brought with it the first sample of asteroid dust we have ever had. Its successor, Hayabusa 2, is currently gathering samples from another asteroid.

Itokawa is an S-type asteroid. These are thought to have formed relatively close to the sun, so researchers expected them to have very little water. Because of this, many scientists have hypothesised that while Earth may have been built from S-type asteroids, it got its water later on from wetter types of asteroids and icy comets.

 

 

Maitrayee Bose and Ziliang Jin at Arizona State University analysed the water content in two mineral grains brought back by Hayabusa. They expected that there should be too little water to measure, but proved themselves wrong. “Itokawa is bone-dry with respect to anything in our human experience,” Bose says. “But it’s wetter than we expected.”

Itokawa was once part of a larger rock, probably 20 to 50 kilometres in size, says Bose. The pair estimate that this larger rock would have contained about half as much water as all of Earth’s oceans combined.

They also measured the ratio of hydrogen and deuterium, an isotope of hydrogen, in the grains. This ratio is a signature of where the water came from, and the pair found that it was the same as Earth’s water, as well as the water on the moon and Mars.

This suggests that the water on all of these bodies came from the same place, Bose says – primordial pebbles that stuck together to become asteroids like Itokawa, which crashed together to become whole worlds. In this scenario, there is no need for water to be delivered later on.

There are two missions at other types of asteroids now that will eventually bring back samples: Hayabusa 2 at Ryugu, and the OSIRIS-REx mission at Bennu. Understanding how their water is similar or different to Earth’s water could help complete the puzzle. “Getting all this variety of materials will really help us understand our story, the story of our planet, better,” Bose says.

Quelle: NewScientist

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ASU researchers find water in samples from asteroid Itokawa

Up to half of Earth's ocean water may have come from impacts by asteroids

Two cosmochemists at Arizona State University have made the first-ever measurements of water contained in samples from the surface of an asteroid. The samples came from asteroid Itokawa and were collected by the Japanese space probe Hayabusa.

The team's findings suggest that impacts early in Earth's history by similar asteroids could have delivered as much as half of our planet's ocean water.

"We found the samples we examined were enriched in water compared to the average for inner solar system objects," Ziliang Jin said. A postdoctoral scholar in ASU's School of Earth and Space Exploration, Jin is the lead author on the paper published May 1 in Science Advances reporting the results. His co-author is Maitrayee Bose, assistant professor in the school. 

"It was a privilege that the Japanese space agency JAXA was willing to share five particles from Itokawa with a U.S. investigator," Bose said. "It also reflects well on our school."

The team's idea of looking for water in the Itokawa samples came as a surprise for the Hayabusa project. 

"Until we proposed it, no one thought to look for water," Bose said. "I'm happy to report that our hunch paid off."

In two of the five particles, the team identified the mineral pyroxene. In terrestrial samples, pyroxenes have water in their crystal structure. Bose and Jin suspected that the Itokawa particles might also have traces of water, but they wanted to know exactly how much. Itokawa has had a rough history involving heating, multiple impacts, shocks and fragmentation. These would raise the temperature of the minerals and drive off water.

To study the samples, each about half the thickness of a human hair, the team used ASU's Nanoscale Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometer (NanoSIMS), which can measure such tiny mineral grains with great sensitivity.

The NanoSIMS measurements revealed the samples were unexpectedly rich in water. They also suggest that even nominally dry asteroids such as Itokawa may in fact harbor more water than scientists have assumed.

Fragmented world

Itokawa is a peanut-shaped asteroid about 1,800 feet long and 700 to 1,000 feet wide. It circles the sun every 18 months at an average distance of 1.3 times the Earth-sun distance. Part of Itokawa's path brings it inside Earth's orbit, and at farthest, it sweeps out a little beyond that of Mars.

Based on Itokawa's spectrum in Earth-based telescopes, planetary scientists place it in the S class. This links it with the stony meteorites, which are thought to be fragments from S-type asteroids broken off in collisions.

"S-type asteroids are one of the most common objects in the asteroid belt," Bose said. "They originally formed at a distance from the sun of one-third to three times Earth's distance." She adds that although they are small, these asteroids have kept whatever water and other volatile materials they formed with.

In structure, Itokawa resembles a pair of rubble piles crunched together. It has two main lobes, each studded with boulders but having different overall densities, while between the lobes is a narrower section. 

Jin and Bose point out that today's Itokawa is the remnant of a parent body at least 12 miles wide that at some point was heated between 1,000 and 1,500 degrees Fahrenheit. The parent body suffered several large shocks from impacts, with one final shattering event that broke it apart. In the aftermath two of the fragments merged and formed today's Itokawa, which reached its current size and shape about 8 million years ago.

"The particles we analyzed came from a part of Itokawa called the Muses Sea," Bose said. "It's an area on the asteroid that's smooth and dust-covered."

Jin added, "Although the samples were collected at the surface, we don't know where these grains were in the original parent body. But our best guess is that they were buried more than 100 meters deep within it." 

He adds that despite the catastrophic breakup of the parent body, and the sample grains being exposed to radiation and impacts by micrometeorites at the surface, the minerals still show evidence of water that has not been lost to space.

In addition, "The minerals have hydrogen isotopic compositions that are indistinguishable from Earth," Jin said.

"This means S-type asteroids and the parent bodies of ordinary chondrites are likely a critical source of water and several other elements for the terrestrial planets," Bose explained.  

She added, "And we can say this only because of in-situ isotopic measurements on returned samples of asteroid regolith — their surface dust and rocks. 

"That makes these asteroids high-priority targets for exploration."

Scouting for samples

Bose notes that she is building a clean-lab facility at ASU, which along with the NanoSIMS (partially funded by National Science Foundation) would be the first such facility at a public university capable of analyzing dust grains from other solar system bodies.

Another Japanese mission, Hayabusa 2, is currently at an asteroid named Ryugu, where it will collect samples, bringing them back to Earth in December 2020. The director of ASU's Center for Meteorite Studies and newly selected director of the School of Earth and Space Exploration, Professor Meenakshi Wadhwa, is a member of the Initial Analysis team for Chemistry for the Hayabusa 2 mission.

ASU is also on board NASA's OSIRIS-REx sample-return mission, which is orbiting a near-Earth asteroid named Bennu. Among other instruments, the spacecraft carries the OSIRIS-REx Thermal Emission Spectrometer (OTES), designed by ASU Regents' Professor Philip Christensen and built at the school. OSIRIS-REx is scheduled to collect samples from Bennu in summer 2020 and bring them back to Earth in September 2023. 

For planetary scientists and cosmochemists who are drawing a picture of how the solar system formed, asteroids are a great resource. As leftover building blocks for the planetary system, they vary greatly among themselves while preserving materials from early in solar system history.

"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," she added. "It would not be surprising if a similar mechanism of water production is common for rocky exoplanets around other stars."

Quelle: New American University

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