All About Space

RYUGU SAMPLES REVEAL ASTEROID’S INNER WORKINGS

Pieces of rock from the asteroid Ryugu splashed down on Earth in 2020

- Reported by Chelsea Gohd

Ryugu is a near-Earth asteroid that Japan visited with its Hayabusa2 spacecraft. The craft launched in 2014, arrived at the space rock in 2018 and in December 2020 dropped off a capsule carrying 5.4 grams of asteroid material to Earth. This has given scientists the ability to study the asteroid up close here on our home planet with a full range of technologi­es.

In a new study, scientists reveal a detailed picture of the asteroid and what its surface and subsurface material is really like. As it turns out, Ryugu is covered in flat and elongated pieces. The team used an optical microscope to take images of grains of material from Ryugu. To get an idea of how these samples represent the complete asteroid, the team also compared what they saw in the lab with observatio­ns made by the Hayabusa2 spacecraft, which studied the asteroid from orbit for 16 months and captured some incredible close-up imagery of Ryugu during two landing manoeuvres.

“We focused on comparison between pebbles observed by the spacecraft and the returned samples to evaluate the representa­tiveness of returned grains gathered from limited areas of the asteroid,” said Shogo Tachibana, a cosmochemi­st and researcher with the Japan Aerospace Exploratio­n Agency (JAXA) and the University of Tokyo. “The returned samples well represent Ryugu surface particles from a morphologi­cal point of view,” Tachibana said, adding that the pieces they studied were flat and elongated. “This morphology, probably broken pieces of larger boulders, seems characteri­stic of Ryugu surface pebbles, and we have them in hand now,” Tachibana said.

The process of getting pieces from an asteroid from outer space to Earth and safely into the hands of scientists is tricky, to put it lightly. Tachibana, who worked with the sample collection and capsule recovery teams on the Hayabusa2 mission, said that, unsurprisi­ngly, “there have been many nerve-wracking things. The safe recovery of the capsule and the rapid and safe preparatio­n for the container opening in the curation chamber were actually most nervewrack­ing for me. We had to open the container and take out particles as soon as possible.”

Hayabusa2 isn’t done yet, however. After delivering the capsule to Earth on 5 December 2020, the probe embarked on its first extended mission to another asteroid.

“The returned samples well represent Ryugu surface particles from a morphologi­cal point of view”

Shogo Tachibana

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