Extraterrestrial Materials: Categories
Extraterrestrial Materials: Categories
Extraterrestrial Materials: Categories
Categories[edit]
Extraterrestrial material for study on earth can be classified into a few broad categories,
namely:
To date, samples of Moon rock have been collected by robotic and crewed missions. The
comet Wild 2 (Genesis mission) and the asteroid Itokawa (Hayabusa mission) have each
been visited by robotic spacecraft that returned samples to Earth, and samples of the solar
wind were also returned by the robotic Genesis mission.[8][9]
Current sample-return missions are OSIRIS-REx to asteroid Bennu,[10][11] and Hayabusa2 to
asteroid Ryugu.[12] Several sample-return mission are planned for the Moon, Mars, and
Mars' moons (see: Sample-return mission#List of missions).
Material obtained from sample-return missions are considered pristine and
uncontaminated, and their curation and study must take place at specialized facilities where
the samples are protected from Earthly contamination and from contact with the
atmosphere.[13][14][15][16] These facilities are specially designed to preserve both the sample
integrity and protect the Earth from potential biological contamination. Restricted bodies
include planets or moons suspected to have either past or present habitable
environments to microscopic life, and therefore must be treated as extremely biohazardous.
[17][18]
Lines of study[edit]
Samples analyzed on Earth can be matched against findings of remote sensing, for more
insight into the processes that formed the Solar System.
Astrobiology[edit]
Astrobiology is an interdisciplinary scientific field concerned with the origins, early evolution,
distribution, and future of life in the universe. It involves investigations on the presence of
the organic compounds on comets, asteroids, Mars or the moons of the gas giants. Several
sample-return missions to asteroids and comets are currently in the works with a key
interest in astrobiology. More samples from asteroids, comets and moons could help
determine whether life formed in other astronomical bodies, and if it could have been
carried to Earth by meteorites or comets — a process termed panspermia.[27][28][29]
The abundant organic compounds in primitive meteorites and interplanetary dust
particles are thought to originate largely in the interstellar medium. However, this material
may have been modified in the protoplanetary disk and has been modified to varying
extents in the asteroidal parent bodies.[30]
Cosmic dust contains complex organic compounds (amorphous organic solids with a
mixed aromatic-aliphatic structure) that can be created naturally by stars and radiation.[31][32]
[33]
These compounds, in the presence of water and other habitable factors, are thought to
have produced and spontaneously assembled the building blocks of life.[34][35]
The origin of water on Earth is the subject of a significant body of research in the fields
of planetary science, astronomy, and astrobiology. Isotopic ratios provide a unique
"chemical fingerprint" that is used to compare Earth's water with reservoirs elsewhere in the
Solar System. One such isotopic ratio, that of deuterium to hydrogen (D/H), is particularly
useful in the search for the origin of water on Earth. However, when and how that water
was delivered to Earth is the subject of ongoing research.[36][37]