Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cosmic cargo

- (AP/Australian Space Agency)

Members of the Japan Aerospace Exploratio­n Agency arrive at a facility in Woomera, Australia, with a box containing asteroid samples taken by the Hayabusa2 spacecraft, which delivered a capsule that landed in the Australian Outback on Sunday. Agency officials said they plan to take the capsule back to Japan after its preliminar­y treatment at an Australian lab is finished.

TOKYO — Japanese space officials said they are excited about the return of a capsule that landed safely in the Australian Outback on Sunday while carrying soil samples from a distant asteroid, and that they are eager to begin analyzing the “treasure” inside.

The capsule’s delivery by Japan’s Hayabusa2 spacecraft completes its six-year sample-return mission and opens the door for research into finding clues to the origin of the solar system and life on Earth.

“We were able to land the treasure box” onto the sparsely populated Australian desert of Woomera as planned, said Yuichi Tsuda, Hayabusa2 project manager at the Japan Aerospace Exploratio­n Agency adding that the capsule was in perfect shape. “I really look forward to opening it and looking inside.”

The capsule will be packed in a container as soon as its preliminar­y treatment at an Australian lab is finished and brought back to Japan this week, Satoru Nakazawa, a project sub-manager, said during an online news conference from Woomera.

Hayabusa2 left the asteroid Ryugu, about 180 million miles from Earth, a year ago.

After it released the capsule on Saturday, it set off on a new expedition to another distant asteroid.

Tsuda said Hayabusa2’s successful completion of its inter-planetary round trip is a first and that he hoped to use the expertise gained in future planetary exploratio­n, possibly Japan’s MMX mission to Mars’ moons beginning in 2024.

Scientists say they believe the samples, especially ones taken from under the asteroid’s surface, contain valuable data unaffected by space radiation and other environmen­tal factors. They are particular­ly interested in organic materials in the samples to find out how they are distribute­d in the solar system and related to life on Earth.

“And then the sample will start to tell its stories and reveal to us some wonderful signs about how water arrived on our Earth and how we even may have been formed, such as our organics, carbon-based animals, humans and plants,” said Megan Clark, head of the Australian Space Agency, who was also at the news conference.

The return of the capsule with the world’s first asteroid subsurface samples comes weeks after NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft made a successful touch- and- go grab of surface samples from the asteroid Bennu. China, meanwhile, announced recently that its lunar lander collected undergroun­d samples and sealed them within the spacecraft for return to Earth, as space developing nations compete in their missions.

Japan Aerospace Exploratio­n Agency officials said the Ryugu samples will be handled in clean chambers to avoid any impact on the samples. Initial research is planned in the first six months, and the samples will be distribute­d to NASA and other key internatio­nal research groups, with about 40% stored for future technologi­cal advancemen­t to resolve unanswered questions.

For Hayabusa2, it’s not the end of the mission. It is now heading to a small asteroid called 1998KY26 on a journey slated to take 11 years one way, for possible research into planetary defense, such as finding ways to prevent meteorites from hitting Earth.

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