SCI NASA Space Probe Close to Astroid Bennu...Photo shows trash left on surface!

paul bunyan

Frostbite Falls, Minnesota
For a fascinating SF Novella series that includes alot of "Life inside an Astroid" where "Belters" or astroid miners live check out "THE EXPANSE" book series by James S.A. Corey.

SyFy has turned the books into a fun romp thru the Solar System. Life on Astroids, Moons, and a large Mars colony.

SyFy TV series located here: https://www.syfy.com/theexpanse

hope you enjoy, I did..... but then I'm just a highfunctioning tard.

p
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
Making it da-glo doesn't make it real.

Stop and consider the odds that a random asteroid happens to have a panel from Amelia Earhart's plane, or a missing bulkhead from the Titanic, or a fragment of a fictional spacecraft. Duh.

Why are you such a kill joy today? If you don't believe it's debris then move along to another thread and let the rest of us speculate. :groucho:

My vote is it's aliens.
 

sierra don

Veteran Member
Quick, send Geraldo Rivera up there.....!!!! Just tell him it's Al Capone's other hidden vault.......

geraldo%20rivera%20net%20worth.jpg
 

NoMoreLibs

Kill Commie's, Every Single One Of Them!
Or the 3720 post Syrian thread. How much stuff is stored here never to be touched again?
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
Oh. You must be looking at that big ROCK.

It's a rock.

What I'm finding really freaking fascinating in these close-up surface pictures of various asteroids is the "white stuff". It was the same from the Japanese project that sent pictures from asteroid Ryugu earlier in the year. I WANT to know if it's methane ice. If so, our system and even galaxy may be rich with simple organic molecules....either a by-product of, or a possible building block of life.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.yahoo.com/news/nasa-probe-finds-signs-water-nearby-asteroid-bennu-000342673.html

NASA probe finds signs of water on nearby asteroid Bennu

By Joey Roulette, Reuters 8 hours ago

ORLANDO, Fla. (Reuters) - NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft has discovered ingredients for water on a relatively nearby skyscraper-sized asteroid, a rocky acorn-shaped object that may hold clues to the origins of life on Earth, scientists said on Monday.

OSIRIS-REx, which flew last week within a scant 12 miles (19 km) of the asteroid Bennu some 1.4 million miles (2.25 million km) from Earth, found traces of hydrogen and oxygen molecules - part of the recipe for water and thus the potential for life - embedded in the asteroid's rocky surface.

The probe, on a mission to return samples from the asteroid to Earth for study, was launched in 2016. Bennu, roughly a third of a mile wide (500 meters), orbits the sun at roughly the same distance as Earth. There is concern among scientists about the possibility of Bennu impacting Earth late in the 22nd century.

"We have found the water-rich minerals from the early solar system, which is exactly the kind of sample we were going out there to find and ultimately bring back to Earth," University of Arizona planetary scientist Dante Lauretta, the OSIRIS-REx mission's principal investigator, said in a telephone interview.

Asteroids are among the leftover debris from the solar system's formation some 4.5 billion years ago. Scientists believe asteroids and comets crashing into early Earth may have delivered organic compounds and water that seeded the planet for life, and atomic-level analysis of samples from Bennu could provide key evidence to support that hypothesis.

"When samples of this material are returned by the mission to Earth in 2023, scientists will receive a treasure trove of new information about the history and evolution of our solar system," Amy Simon, a scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, said in a statement.

"We're really trying to understand the role that these carbon-rich asteroids played in delivering water to the early Earth and making it habitable," Lauretta added.

OSIRIS-REx will pass later this month just 1.2 miles (1.9 km) from Bennu, entering the asteroid's gravitational pull and analyzing its terrain. From there, the spacecraft will begin to gradually tighten its orbit around the asteroid, spiraling to within just 6 feet (2 meters) of its surface so its robot arm can snatch a sample of Bennu by July 2020.

The spacecraft will later fly back to Earth, jettisoning a capsule bearing the asteroid specimen for a parachute descent in the Utah desert in September 2023.

(Reporting by Joey Roulette; Editing by Will Dunham)
Comments (406)
 

bw

Fringe Ranger
From there, the spacecraft will begin to gradually tighten its orbit around the asteroid, spiraling to within just 6 feet (2 meters) of its surface so its robot arm can snatch a sample of Bennu by July 2020.

Well poot. They aren't getting a sample of the asteroid, they're getting a sample of the asteroid's accretion debris. If they want the asteroid material, they need to land on it at about 45 degrees latitude and drill a hole.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Well poot. They aren't getting a sample of the asteroid, they're getting a sample of the asteroid's accretion debris. If they want the asteroid material, they need to land on it at about 45 degrees latitude and drill a hole.

Yup.
 
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