Thursday, August 22, 2019

Incredible Images Show Something Uncannily Familiar About The Rocks on Asteroid Ryugu - ScienceAlert









DAN ROBITZSKI, FUTURISM




23 AUG 2019







Rocks on the surface of Ryugu, the distant asteroid currently being explored by theJapanese space probe Hayabusa-2, bear a striking resemblance to rocks from meteorites that have crashed down on Earth.


That's according to a team of European and Japanese scientists who analyzed newly-released photos that Hayabusa-2's robotic lander, MASCOT,took from the asteroid's surfaceback in October 2018,Gizmodoreports.

Because the asteroid is thought to contain material from the earliest days of our solar system, the surprisingly dust-free asteroid's similarity to rocks found on Earth could have huge implications for understanding our planet's past.

Some of the rocks resemble carbonaceous chondrite meteorites that have been found crash-landed on Earth, according tothe team's research, which was published in the journalScienceon Friday.

Carbonaceous chondrites are some of theoldest known rocksin the solar system, but the samples here on Earth were altered as they passed through the atmosphere.

When Hayabusa-2eventually brings samplesback down to Earth, scientists will finally have an opportunity to study the space rocks in their original form.

"What we have from these images is really knowing how the rocks and material is distributed on the surface of this asteroid, what the weathering history of this stuff is, and the geologic context," Rolf Jaumann of the German Aerospace Centertold Gizmodo.

"It's the first information on this kind of material in its original environment."

This article was originally published byFuturism. Read theoriginal article.




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