Asteroid Bennu was once part of a space rock with flowing water

OSIRIS-REx and Bennu

An illustration of NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft descending towards the asteroid Bennu

NASA/Goddard/University of Arizona

The asteroid Bennu is a strange little place, but data from NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission is starting to unravel its mysteries. The spacecraft, which has been orbiting Bennu since December 2018, is gearing up to take a sample from the asteroid’s surface later this month. In preparation, it has gathered a smorgasbord of information, including hints that Bennu’s parent asteroid may have had flowing water.

Bennu is a type of asteroid called a rubble pile, formed when something smashed into a larger asteroid billions of years ago and the bits coalesced into many smaller asteroids. By studying Bennu, which is about 500 metres wide, we can learn more about this parent asteroid, which was probably a few hundred kilometres across.

When OSIRIS-REx reached Bennu, it spotted something strange: some of the boulders had bright veins up to 150 centimetres long and 14 centimetres thick. These veins are too large to have formed on Bennu itself, says Hannah Kaplan at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, so they were probably portions of larger cracks on Bennu’s parent that were up to several kilometres long.

Advertisement


“They suggest that there was fluid flowing on fairly large scales on Bennu’s parent asteroid,” says Kaplan. That is because the veins are made of carbonates, a type of compound that generally forms due to interactions between water and rock, she says.

In fact, over 98 per cent of Bennu’s surface seems to be coated in carbonates and organic molecules, complex carbon-bearing compounds that are seen as precursors to life. Yet despite probably having both water and organics, Bennu’s parent was unlikely to be teeming with life.

“You’re in the vacuum of space, there’s no atmosphere, you’re looking at a lot of irradiation, it’s cold – you wouldn’t want to sit on the surface,” says Kaplan. “It’s not a favourable environment per se, but it does have a lot of the factors that make a place technically habitable.”

One of the main goals of OSIRIS-REx is to investigate the carbon on Bennu because Earth was probably built from rocks similar to it, and these may have brought the ingredients of life here. “These same types of organics may have been delivered to early Earth and may have been the start of some of the organic chemistry that led to life as we know it,” says Kaplan.

There are also differences across the surface of Bennu that are hard to explain. It is covered in boulders, but the largest ones are mostly in its southern hemisphere. The boulders themselves are strange too, with some being so porous that empty space appears to comprise up to 55 per cent of them, more than any meteorite we have ever recovered.

There seem to be two populations of rocks: porous, darker-coloured ones and denser, lighter-coloured ones that often have carbonate veins. These differences aren’t obvious to the human eye – the surface would just seem to be a fairly uniform dark-grey to us – but they could be critical in helping us figure out how Bennu formed. They may have come from two different areas in Bennu’s parent body, with the denser rocks coming from deeper underground.

That wouldn’t answer all of Bennu’s mysteries, though, because some relate to the asteroid’s evolution after it was chipped off its larger parent body. “The way Bennu’s colour changes over time is quite a bit different than what we have seen on other planetary surfaces like the moon or other asteroids that we’ve visited,” says Daniella DellaGiustina at the University of Arizona.

Astronomers can date different areas of Bennu by comparing fresher regions twith more weathered ones, revealing how they change over time. Rocks on Bennu seem to become more blue, whereas those on other space rocks tend to become more red. This may be because of how those carbonate-filled rocks interact with the solar wind and micrometeorites differently to rocks without carbonates, says DellaGiustina.

On 20 October, OSIRIS-REx will take a small sample from Bennu’s surface before heading back towards Earth. When the sample gets here in 2023, researchers will be able to experiment with them directly, hopefully answering many of these questions.

“All the characterisation work we’ve done for Bennu basically puts this return sample into context,” says Benjamin Rozitis at the Open University in the UK. If we can study the sample thoroughly and understand how it relates to the different rocks on Bennu, that makes it easier to compare Bennu with other asteroids and small bodies.

“We can’t do a sample return from every interesting place in the solar system, but by studying Bennu globally and trying to understand it as a small world, we get a much better sense of how Bennu relates to other objects in our solar system that we might never be able to sample,” says DellaGiustina.

Journal references: Science, DOI:10.1126/science.abc3557, DOI:10.1126/science.abc3660, DOI:10.1126/science.abc3522;
Science Advances,
DOI:10.1126/sciadv.abd3649, DOI:10.1126/sciadv.abc3699, DOI:10.1126/sciadv.abc3350

Sign up to our free Launchpad newsletter for a voyage across the galaxy and beyond, every Friday

More on these topics:

source: newscientist.com