- cross-posted to:
- astronomy@mander.xyz
- cross-posted to:
- astronomy@mander.xyz
A teaspoon’s worth of dark dust and granules scooped from an asteroid 200m miles from Earth has arrived at the Natural History Museum in London, where scientists are preparing to unlock its secrets.
Researchers at the museum received 100mg of the pristine material, which at 4.6bn years old dates back to the dawn of the solar system, after Nasa’s Osiris-Rex mission stopped at asteroid Bennu in 2020 and returned samples to Earth in September.
gonna be a plastic bag in it
Dang, space junk really has gotten out of control, huh?
Damnit, for a moment I got all excited, like, "Oh, dark dust like dark matter and dark energy, that sounds fascinating, I must learn more … abou- … oh. Yeah, nevermind … "
which at 4.6bn years old dates back to the dawn of the solar system
…unlike all the other dust, which popped into existence three days ago.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
A teaspoon’s worth of dark dust and granules scooped from an asteroid 200m miles from Earth has arrived at the Natural History Museum in London, where scientists are preparing to unlock its secrets.
Researchers at the museum received 100mg of the pristine material, which at 4.6bn years old dates back to the dawn of the solar system, after Nasa’s Osiris-Rex mission stopped at asteroid Bennu in 2020 and returned samples to Earth in September.
The spacecraft briefly touched down on Bennu, an asteroid that has a 1-in-1,750 chance of colliding with Earth in the next 300 years, and gathered more than 60g of untouched material, the largest amount brought back from space since the Apollo program.
Scientists expect to study the samples for decades as they seek to understand how the solar system formed and whether asteroids delivered substantial amounts of water to Earth and other planets.
The first two years of research at the Natural History Museum will focus on non-destructive tests, such as X-ray diffraction and electron microscopy to learn about Bennu’s mineral composition and structure.
The museum is home to one of the world’s leading meteorite collections, and the staff are well-used to handling small amounts of extremely precious materials from outer space.
The original article contains 498 words, the summary contains 206 words. Saved 59%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
It’s space cocaine
Keep it away from Westminster then.
“What space dust? *sniff I haven’t seen anything.”I wouldn’t be surprised it somebody did snort a bit. They could be the only person ever to have snorted an asteroid which hasn’t naturally entered the atmosphere but was collected by an automated robot.
They should have a look in the corner of our junk room, there’s older dust than that there.