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Scientists overjoyed with comet samples

Stardust’s comet-dust canister opened to reveal ‘hundreds’ of cosmic bits

NASA
Steve Glenn and Ron Seeders examine the Stardust sample canister at NASA's Johnson Space Center, where the comet samples and interstellar dust will be curated.
NBC VIDEO
Return to Earth
Jan. 16: NBC's Michael Okwu reports on the landing of NASA's Stardust mission to the Utah desert.

Today show

By James Oberg
NBC News space analyst
Special to MSNBC
updated 10:11 p.m. ET Jan. 18, 2006

James Oberg
NBC News space analyst
HOUSTON - Scientists say they are overjoyed by their first look at the comet specks and interstellar dust captured by NASA's Stardust spacecraft during its seven-year mission.

"It exceeds all expectations," the mission's principal investigator, University of Washington astronomer Donald Brownlee, said in a university statement posted Wednesday. "It's a huge success."

The samples were brought from space inside a double-sealed capsule that plunged down to the Utah desert early Sunday. That capsule was flown to a nearby military air base and opened in a temporary clean room, revealing the inner canister within. The canister was shipped to NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston under a veil of secrecy on Tuesday, traveling first by military transport and then in an unannounced convoy.

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The next stop was a special clean-room laboratory at the space center, in the same building were moon rocks were received during the Apollo era. Scientists carefully opened the canister to look at the dust from Comet Wild 2 and interstellar space — fine grains embedded in the grid of ultra-light aerogel that served as the "catcher's mitt" during the Stardust spacecraft's high-speed encounter with the comet.

If anything, the initial processing went better than expected, according to an internal NASA memo obtained by MSNBC.com.

"The canister was opened up, and the aerogel collector grid was removed," the memo reported. "Both the canister and aerogel were in remarkably great shape considering they've been in space for seven years."

Image: Particle in aerogel
NASA
This magnified photograph, taken during a pre-Stardust test, shows a particle embedded in a sample of aerogel with a carrot-shaped trail extending behind it. Similar trails were seen in the aerogel that actually flew aboard Stardust.

The memo said that "hundreds of particles" could be seen in the collector tray for cometary samples. "There were two particularly large comet particles that had 'exploded' inside the aerogel," it reported. "Needless to say, the scientists are ecstatic."

NASA researcher Scott Sandford said the collection effort "succeeded well beyond our wildest hopes."

"I am not sure if it is good clean-room protocol to hug each other, but there was a lot of it going on for the first 10 minutes or so," Sandford said in an e-mail forwarded by NASA's Ames Research Center.

Brownlee said he could see "lots of impacts," signaled by carrot-shaped tracks inside the aerogel. Some of the tracks could be seen from several feet away, with black bits of comet dust at the ends of the tracks. One track "is almost large enough to put your little finger into it," he said.

Brownlee estimated that more than a million specks of dust, ranging down to microscopic size, might be embedded within the aerogel blocks. The internal memo noted that comet-dust trails were found even within stray bits of aerogel that had settled around the inside of the canister.

Scientific treasure trove
The dust specks represent a treasure trove for about 200 scientists from around the world who are waiting to analyze the Stardust samples. Comets are "dirty snowballs," cosmic leftovers from the formation of the solar system 4.6 billion years ago. Therefore, pristine samples of a comet could well shed new light on the chemical origins of life on Earth.

Fast-flying cometary bits were collected on one side of Stardust's tennis-racket-shaped tray of aerogel, as Stardust flew within 150 miles (240 kilometers) of Comet Wild 2's nucleus in January 2004. During an earlier sampling session, in April 2000, Stardust gathered interstellar dust samples on the other side of the tray. That part of the mission succeeded as well, according to the internal memo.

“The interstellar tray had two visible-eye trails observed,” the memo said. “Since the interstellar particles are considerably smaller than the cometary particles, they will require inspection by microscope to properly observe them."

The memo said Stardust's science team wrapped up their initial inspections three hours early.


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