From the Discovery Channel Online

Specks of comet dust carried to Earth inside a NASA science probe
show tantalizing hints of organic compounds, bolstering suspicions that
comets delivered key ingredients for the development of life on Earth.

Stardust_goto
Analysis of the samples brought back last month aboard the Stardust
capsule is in the very early stages, but lead scientist Donald Brownlee
said this week that he is encouraged by what researchers have found so
far.

"We’re seeing a variety of things that we know absolutely come from
a comet," Brownlee, an astronomer with the University of Washington,
said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science.

Though analysis has just begun, the samples so far have revealed iron, sulfides, glassy materials and traces of olivine.

The samples are from Comet Wild-2, which flew just 149 miles (240 kilometers) past the Stardust spacecraft on Jan. 2, 2004.

During the encounter, the spacecraft extended a collection tray
filled with 132 tiles of lightweight, heat-resistant gel that captured
individual particles streaming off the comet’s body.

As they bored into the gel, the particles created carrot-shaped
trails, many of which were visible to the naked eye when scientists
opened the canister upon its return to Earth a year later.

"When you have the samples in hand, it’s a whole different universe," Brownlee said.

Early indications show Stardust collected at least 2,300 comet
particles measuring 15 micrometers — one-third the diameter of a human
hair — or larger, according to University of Chicago researchers who
built one of the spacecraft science instruments.

Scientists are particularly keen to learn if any of the comet
samples contain traces of matter from the original dust cloud that
provided the raw materials for the creation of the solar system some
4.8 billion years ago.

Comets are believed to be relatively unchanged since their formation
because they primarily dwell far from the sun’s heat in a perpetual
deep-freeze beyond Neptune’s orbit.

After dropping off its return capsule for a parachute landing on
Earth, the Stardust spacecraft was placed into a solar orbit while NASA
weighs options for a second comet encounter. No more samples can be
returned, but the probe has cameras and other instruments for close-up
studies.

The first scientific results from the Stardust mission are expected to be released next month.

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Sam Harrelson lives in Asheville, NC and is pursuing his PhD in Religious Studies (Early Christian Origins). Sam is also an award winning blogger, speaker and online community strategist.

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