Share this page

Sun and Moon today

Moonphase today
The Sun pnline from SOHO

Newsletter




RSS Feeds

RSS Feeds

Water and organic compunds on asteroids
Thursday, 29 April 2010 10:09
Print
Solar system - Asteroids

Scientists using a NASA funded telescope have detected water-ice and carbon-based organic compounds on the surface of an asteroid.

The cold hard facts of the discovery of the frosty mixture on one of the asteroid belt's largest occupants, suggests that some asteroids, along with their celestial brethren, comets, were the water carriers for a primordial Earth. The research is published in today's issue of the journal Nature.

"For a long time the thinking was that you couldn't find a cup's worth of water in the entire asteroid belt," said Don Yeomans, manager of NASA's Near-Earth Object Program Office at NASAs JPL"Today we know you not only could quench your thirst, but you just might be able to fill up every pool on Earth - and then some."

The discovery is a result of six years of observing asteroid 24 Themis by astronomer Andrew Rivkin of the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland. Rivkin, along with Joshua Emery, of the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, employed an Infrared Telescope to take measurements of the asteroid on seven separate occasions beginning in 2002. Buried in their compiled data was the consistent infrared signature of water ice and carbon-based organic materials.

The study's findings are particularly surprising because it was believed that Themis, orbiting the sun at "only" 479 million km, was too close to the solar system's fiery heat source to carry water ice left over from the solar system's origin 4,6 billion years ago.

Now, the astronomical community knows better. The research could help re-write the book on the solar system's formation and the nature of asteroids.

"This is exciting because it provides us a better understanding about our past - and our possible future," said Yeomans. "This research indicates that not only could asteroids be possible sources of raw materials, but they could be the fueling stations and watering holes for future interplanetary exploration."

Rivkin and Emory's findings were independently confirmed by a team led by Humberto Campins at the University of Central Florida

More information about asteroids and near-Earth objects is at: http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/asteroidwatch