Museum unveils asteroid hinting at Earth’s origins

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WASHINGTON: In a hushed room of a museum in Washington, cameras and cell phones focus on a tiny piece of rock, no larger than a piece of gravel.

The fragment might seem insignificant, but it is a sample taken from the asteroid Bennu, which scientists are studying in the hope of discovering if asteroids actually brought the building blocks of life — carbon and water — to Earth.

Exhibited to the public on Friday for the first time at the Smithsonian in the US capital, the tiny stone is just visible inside its small capsule.

“This asteroid, now we know, has water crystals and carbon, two of the elements that produce ultimately life,” said NASA boss Bill Nelson, a few minutes before the curtain rose on the dedication ceremony.

The new space venture is “part of our quest to understand, to try to understand, who we are, what we are, where we are, in the vastness of this cosmos,” Nelson told journalists and spaceenthusiasts eager to whip out their cameras to snap an image of the rock fragment.

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Other museum visitors then come in and they too reach for their phones for a selfie with the little black rock. Jenn Mann came from neighbouring Virginia to take her grandson to “finally” see a piece of asteroid on Earth.

“I was afraid it was just a speck of dust, but it’s actually much bigger than I thought,” laughed the 64-year-old systems analyst.

“I was 10 years old when man first walked out on the Moon, and I think everyone in my generation is just really keen on all of that because you wouldn’t remember all the excitement that was going on during that time,” she said, before taking a photo for her daughter.

NASA’s Osiris-Rex mission took the sample in 2020 from Bennu, an 4.5 billion-year-old asteroid 500 metres in diameter, which was more than 300 million kilometres from Earth at the time.

The capsule containing the precious cargo returned successfully to Earth in September, landing in the American desert. Since then, analysis has been underway at NASA’s Johnson Space Centre in Houston.

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Even though she worked with the scientific team on the project, Nayi Castro, like the other visitors, was seeing a fragment of the sample with her own eyes for the first time. “It’s indescribable, I can’t wait to bring my family and my friends to look at it,” said the 36-year-old mission operations manager, proudly wearing the NASA logo on her t-shirt.

“To actually to look at this sample was super exciting cause it was so much work to get this sample back,” she said, smiling. Tim McCoy, meteorite curator at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, described the discovery as a “milestone.” – AFP

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