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[Discussion] Unlocking Cosmic Mysteries: Bennu Sample Offers New Perspectives on the Solar System's Past


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NASA's ambitious OSIRIS-REx mission has marked a milestone in space exploration history. The spacecraft ventured billions of miles to asteroid Bennu and back, enduring a seven-year odyssey to retrieve precious cargo — a sample from the cosmic body's rugged terrain. The specimen, consisting of 100 to 250 grams of space rubble, finally reached Earth on September 24, following a high-speed re-entry and safe parachute-aided descent in Utah's desert. Scientists at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston have since been eagerly peering into the material, which reveals traces of water and carbon, fundamental elements linked to life's genesis.

Asteroid Bennu: A Time Capsule from the Depths of Space

Bennu, a celestial body with the somewhat ominous distinction of having a 1-in-2,700 chance of impacting Earth in 2182, is more than just a potential future threat. It's a floating repository of the solar system's history. This carbon-rich asteroid could possess keys to life's terrestrial origins, as it houses compounds present during the dawn of life on our planet. NASA's revelation of water and carbon in the sample underscores the significance of asteroids in shaping Earth's destiny, potentially having seeded our world with life's foundational elements through ancient impacts.

In Search of Life's Building Blocks: Beyond Bennu's Surface

The profound implications of these findings extend beyond Bennu's potential hazards. Recent discoveries on another asteroid, Ryugu, highlight the presence of uracil, a fundamental component of RNA, indicating that asteroids like Bennu may have been cosmic couriers delivering life's prerequisites to Earth. The OSIRIS-REx team anticipates that Bennu's sample could contain similar clues, offering unprecedented insights into the biological precursors that sparked life on our planet.

Dante Lauretta, the mission's principal investigator, expressed that analyzing Bennu's samples is akin to deciphering cosmic time capsules, providing a deeper understanding of our solar system's origins and the building blocks of life. This quest transcends scientific curiosity, delving into profound questions about our place in the cosmos.

The mission's success wasn't without challenges. The spacecraft had to navigate Bennu's rocky landscape to collect the sample, using a nitrogen burst for precision during touchdown and subsequent takeoff. This maneuver caused a flurry of surface material, some of which was captured by OSIRIS-REx, enriching the mission's scientific bounty. The craft's journey concluded with its departure from Bennu in May 2021, setting the stage for the current analysis and the mysteries it continues to unravel.


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This is interesting as I'm into astronomy. I wonder what all they would find in the samples they took back.

I also can't imagine the people who are literally waiting for the spacecraft to get there, collect, then get back after so many years!

I'll tag @Kyng as I know he's into astronomy as well 🙂

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17 hours ago, ZandraJoi said:

This is interesting as I'm into astronomy. I wonder what all they would find in the samples they took back.

I also can't imagine the people who are literally waiting for the spacecraft to get there, collect, then get back after so many years!

I'll tag @Kyng as I know he's into astronomy as well 🙂

Ya, I never really thought about the fact that they are waiting years for these missions to achieve their goals. Imagine how many people never see them fulfilled or get hired after the mission is already on the way.

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On 10/16/2023 at 7:19 PM, Kyng said:

Interesting stuff indeed. The building blocks of life aren't exactly common, so if they got here from elsewhere... that makes me wonder where else they might have reached!

It opens up a strange paradox.  If the materials are so rare, what are the odds we would find them so quickly, but at the same time, if they are actually very common, where is all the life they would have inevitably spread on habitable planets.

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On 10/16/2023 at 7:19 PM, Kyng said:

Interesting stuff indeed. The building blocks of life aren't exactly common, so if they got here from elsewhere... that makes me wonder where else they might have reached!

Agreed! What creates us human may not create another creature. We may not be able to visit another planet & they not be able to visit ours due to the differences.

On 10/20/2023 at 1:06 AM, Uncrowned Guard said:

It opens up a strange paradox.  If the materials are so rare, what are the odds we would find them so quickly, but at the same time, if they are actually very common, where is all the life they would have inevitably spread on habitable planets.

You made a point here! Life may have found a way to remain hidden from outsiders. If some civilizations are way more advanced in tech, they could have something similar to a "cloaking" device. That'd be interesting to find out lol

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