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Turns out, our meteorites came from asteroids

The longstanding mystery of where most meteorites striking our planet come from has now been solved by the first asteroid samples that a spacecraft has ever returned to Earth.
An image of the near-Earth asteroid Itokawa. The boulder-free areas appear relatively smooth and are filled with small, uniformly sized particles.
An image of the near-Earth asteroid Itokawa. The boulder-free areas appear relatively smooth and are filled with small, uniformly sized particles.University of Tokyo / JAXA
/ Source: Space.com

The longstanding mystery of where most meteorites striking our planet come from has now been solved by the first asteroid samples that a spacecraft has ever returned to Earth.

This discovery is just one of many unearthed with the aid of the Japanese asteroid probe Hayabusa. Another is that asteroids may be shrinking away to nothing, researchers said.

Hayabusa faced many perils on its seven-year mission, including fuel leaks, engine trouble and the loss of the lander intended to gather space rock samples. Nevertheless, the unmanned mission succeeded when a capsule containing more than 1,500 grains of asteroid dust parachuted into the Australian outback in June 2010.

Asteroid's meteorite secret
The billion-year-old jumble of rubble that Hayabusa had visited in 2005, named 25143 Itokawa, is stony or an S-type, the most common kind of asteroid in the inner asteroid belt. Scientists had long suspected that the most-common meteorites, known as ordinary chondrites, originated from such rocky asteroids, but as far as telescopes could tell, the chemistry of these meteorites and asteroids did not match.

Now this first close look of asteroid samples has solved this mystery by revealing how cosmic impacts altered their surfaces.

Scientists used a combination of powerful electron microscopes and X-ray diffraction techniques to study the mineral chemistry of Itokawa's surface dust or regolith.

"Our study demonstrates that the rocky particles recovered from the S-type asteroid are identical to ordinary chondrites," said planetary scientist Tomoki Nakamura at Tohoku University in Japan, lead author of one of the studies on the Hayabusa findings.

Scientists had known the regolith of airless bodies such as asteroids and the moon undergo "space weathering" from solar and cosmic radiation as well as micrometeoroid impacts that can alter their appearance. Past research attempted to account for differences seen between ordinary chondrites and S-type asteroids by studying lunar samples and using that to gauge how much space weathering asteroids experienced.

Now, however, researcher Takaaki Noguchi from Ibaraki University in Mito, Japan, and his colleagues find the space weathering undergone by asteroids is fundamentally unlike that seen on the moon, perhaps due to differences in surface composition and the amount of micrometeoroid impacts and solar wind radiation.

Scientists detailed their findings in six studies in the Aug. 26 issue of the journal Science.

This improved knowledge of space weathering should allow researchers to look at the thousands of meteorites they have collected and match them up with their parent asteroids in space, thus shedding light on the compositions of asteroid types yet to be visited.

"This dust from the surface of the Itokawa asteroid will become a sort of Rosetta stone for astronomers to use," said researcher Michael Zolensky from the NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston, a co-author of one of the studies on the Hayabusa findings.

The research is detailed in six studies in the Aug. 26 issue of the journal Science.

Asteroid with a battered past
Scientists also discovered that the surface of Itokawa, which is only 1,600 feet wide, apparently went through significant heating and impact shocks. Based on its size, the asteroid actually may be made up of fragments of a much bigger rock.

"The particles recovered from the asteroid have experienced long-term heating at about 800 degrees Celsius," or 1,472 degrees Fahrenheit, Nakamura said. To reach this heat, "an asteroid would need to be about 12.4 miles in diameter. The current size of Itokawa is much smaller than that, so it must have first formed as a larger body, then been broken by an impact event and reassembled in its current form."

"At present, the asteroid is decreasing its size due to small impacts that disperse surface material into interplanetary space and also due to solar wind radiation that sputter away atoms of the outermost layers of minerals on the surface of asteroid," he added.

If one were to generalize these findings, "asteroids are on the way to disappearing," Nakamura told Space.com. At the rate Itokawa is losing material, it should be gone within 1 billion years.

As to what's next, "Hayabusa 2 will be launched in 2014 — three years to go," Nakamura said. "Next time we aim to go to a C-type asteroid and bring samples, much more samples, back home. C-type asteroids are enriched in water and organic materials, and we hope to obtain crucial information on the origin of water and life on the Earth."

Follow Space.com contributor Charles Q. Choi on Twitter @cqchoi. Visit Space.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.