Researchers: NASA Asteroid Samples Contain 'Building Blocks' of Life
2025-02-03
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1Scientists examining material collected from an asteroid say it appears to contain some of the chemical building blocks of life.
2The American spacecraft OSIRIS-REx collected the samples in 2020 from the asteroid Bennu.
3In 2023, the spacecraft sent the rock and dust material back to Earth in a special container that landed by parachute.
4Scientists from the American space agency NASA recovered the samples in the western state of Utah.
5OSIRIS-REx is already on its way to another asteroid called Apophis.
6It is expected to reach that asteroid in 2029.
7On Bennu, the spacecraft collected a total of 122 grams of material.
8This is believed to be the largest sample collected from beyond the moon.
9NASA has shared some of the material with international researchers.
10Two research groups released studies last week describing results of their examinations of the asteroid material.
11One study, published in Nature Astronomy, suggested the samples contained a mixture of organic compounds.
12Organic compounds have one or more carbon atoms that attach to other elements, usually hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and sulfur.
13All life on Earth is based on carbon and is built from organic compounds.
14The other study, published in Nature, provides evidence that a much larger object, which Bennu is believed to have broken off from, once held salty, liquid water.
15The researchers said this suggests that in the early solar system, asteroids such as Bennu might have transported water and life-supporting chemicals to other planets and moons.
16Researchers from both groups noted it was important that the samples they worked with came directly from the asteroid itself.
17Asteroid pieces that fall to Earth turn into meteorites, and chemicals inside the samples can be changed or lost.
18In a statement, NASA said the findings do not provide direct evidence of life itself.
19However, the space agency said, "They do suggest the conditions necessary for the emergence of life were widespread across the early solar system."
20This increases the chances that "life could have formed on other planets and moons," the statement added.
21The parent of Bennu is believed to be an icy body measuring about 100 kilometers across.
22Scientists believe the body formed in the outer solar system and was later destroyed, possibly 1 to 2 billion years ago.
23The pieces that broke off likely formed Bennu and other asteroids observed to be masses of loose material, rather than solid objects.
24Nicky Fox is the associate administrator for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington D.C.
25She praised the OSIRIS-REx mission, saying it was "already rewriting the textbook on what we understand about the beginnings of our solar system."
26Fox added that she hopes the samples can help scientists understand "what ingredients in our solar system existed before life started on Earth."
27Tim McCoy is a researcher at the U.S. Smithsonian Institution and was a lead writer of the Nature study.
28He told the Associated Press (AP) that the samples may provide details about "the kind of environment that could have been essential to the steps that lead from elements to life."
29He noted that combining the ingredients of life with an environment of sodium-rich water is "really the pathway to life."
30He added the samples suggest the processes involving the chemical compounds "probably occurred much earlier and were much more widespread than we had thought before."
31Yasuhito Sekine is with the Institute of Science in Tokyo.
32He did not take part in the new research.
33Sekine confirmed the findings were only made possible by examining samples "collected directly from the asteroid, then carefully preserved back on Earth."
34Jason Dworkin is a project scientist for the OSIRIS-REx mission at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland.
35He told Reuters news agency that all biology is made up of organic compounds.
36And some of those may have survived 4.5 billion years.
37Dworkin said the materials from OSIRIS-REx provide new details about a solar system that might have had the right elements to support life.
38But he added that one of the most interesting questions, still remains: "Why we, so far, only see life on Earth and not elsewhere."
39I'm Bryan Lynn.
1Scientists examining material collected from an asteroid say it appears to contain some of the chemical building blocks of life. 2The American spacecraft OSIRIS-REx collected the samples in 2020 from the asteroid Bennu. In 2023, the spacecraft sent the rock and dust material back to Earth in a special container that landed by parachute. Scientists from the American space agency NASA recovered the samples in the western state of Utah. 3OSIRIS-REx is already on its way to another asteroid called Apophis. It is expected to reach that asteroid in 2029. 4On Bennu, the spacecraft collected a total of 122 grams of material. This is believed to be the largest sample collected from beyond the moon. NASA has shared some of the material with international researchers. 5Two research groups released studies last week describing results of their examinations of the asteroid material. 6One study, published in Nature Astronomy, suggested the samples contained a mixture of organic compounds. Organic compounds have one or more carbon atoms that attach to other elements, usually hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and sulfur. All life on Earth is based on carbon and is built from organic compounds. 7The other study, published in Nature, provides evidence that a much larger object, which Bennu is believed to have broken off from, once held salty, liquid water. 8The researchers said this suggests that in the early solar system, asteroids such as Bennu might have transported water and life-supporting chemicals to other planets and moons. 9Researchers from both groups noted it was important that the samples they worked with came directly from the asteroid itself. Asteroid pieces that fall to Earth turn into meteorites, and chemicals inside the samples can be changed or lost. 10In a statement, NASA said the findings do not provide direct evidence of life itself. However, the space agency said, "They do suggest the conditions necessary for the emergence of life were widespread across the early solar system." This increases the chances that "life could have formed on other planets and moons," the statement added. 11The parent of Bennu is believed to be an icy body measuring about 100 kilometers across. Scientists believe the body formed in the outer solar system and was later destroyed, possibly 1 to 2 billion years ago. The pieces that broke off likely formed Bennu and other asteroids observed to be masses of loose material, rather than solid objects. 12Nicky Fox is the associate administrator for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington D.C. She praised the OSIRIS-REx mission, saying it was "already rewriting the textbook on what we understand about the beginnings of our solar system." 13Fox added that she hopes the samples can help scientists understand "what ingredients in our solar system existed before life started on Earth." 14Tim McCoy is a researcher at the U.S. Smithsonian Institution and was a lead writer of the Nature study. He told the Associated Press (AP) that the samples may provide details about "the kind of environment that could have been essential to the steps that lead from elements to life." 15He noted that combining the ingredients of life with an environment of sodium-rich water is "really the pathway to life." He added the samples suggest the processes involving the chemical compounds "probably occurred much earlier and were much more widespread than we had thought before." 16Yasuhito Sekine is with the Institute of Science in Tokyo. He did not take part in the new research. Sekine confirmed the findings were only made possible by examining samples "collected directly from the asteroid, then carefully preserved back on Earth." 17Jason Dworkin is a project scientist for the OSIRIS-REx mission at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland. He told Reuters news agency that all biology is made up of organic compounds. And some of those may have survived 4.5 billion years. 18Dworkin said the materials from OSIRIS-REx provide new details about a solar system that might have had the right elements to support life. But he added that one of the most interesting questions, still remains: "Why we, so far, only see life on Earth and not elsewhere." 19I'm Bryan Lynn. 20Bryan Lynn wrote this story for VOA Learning English, based on reports from The Associated Press, Reuters, Agence France-Presse and NASA. 21_____________________________________________________ 22Words in This Story 23asteroid - n. an object made of rock and metal that orbit the sun, but are smaller than planets 24sample - n. a small amount of something that gives you information about the thing it was taken from 25organic - adj. from a living organism 26emerge - v. to appear from somewhere 27loose - adj. not firmly attached 28ingredient - n. the different parts that make up something 29preserve - v. to keep something the same or prevent it from becoming damaged