Asteroid Ryugu Contains Cosmic Minerals Older Than Our Planet!
More details: See hereThe asteroid Ryugu is proven to be one of the solar system's most scientifically valuable time capsules. Wondering why? Here you go!
A recent examination of miniscule grains recovered from Ryugu by Japan's Hayabusa2 spacecraft discovered that the small space rock contains minerals that developed billions of years before Earth ⁘ materials that have been preserved in immaculate shape.
"These clues begin to tell a story about the starting materials of the asteroid and their early interactions with fluids," officials said in the statement. "This information helps to better define the sequence of fluid activity and processes that led to the current composition of Ryugu and other carbonaceous asteroids."
That modest heating melted ices like as water and carbon dioxide, allowing fluids to leak through the rock.
The fluids stimulated chemical reactions, resulting in a complex material assemblage ⁘ some known to Earth, others completely strange.
Researchers identified carbonates such as manganese-bearing dolomite and ankerite, iron-rich minerals like pyrrhotite and magnetite, copper sulfides, phosphorus-bearing hydroxyapatite, a mineral found in human teeth and bones, and a rare phosphide mineral not found on Earth using only two tiny pieces of the asteroid⁘one grain from its surface and the other from its subsurface.
There were also trace amounts of selenium, sulfur, silicon, and calcium. The diverse range of minerals indicates a complex interplay of fluids and chemistry that occurred billions of years ago in the asteroid, long before our planet's crust hardened.
Because Earth's earliest rocks were damaged by tectonics and erosion, Ryugu provides an unmatched view of the conditions that existed during planetary formation.
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