‘Like discovering a tropical seed in Arctic ice,’ how a shock mineral might change the historical past of asteroid Ryugu


A rogue mineral present in a mud grain from the near-Earth asteroid Ryugu, which was visited and sampled by the Japanese Hayabusa2 mission in 2020, might upend many years of perceived knowledge concerning the circumstances wherein some asteroids fashioned.

The mineral in query is called “djerfisherite” (pronounced juh-fisher-ite) after the American mineralogist Daniel Jerome Fisher, is an iron-nickel sulfide containing potassium. It’s usually discovered on asteroids and in meteorites referred to as “enstatite chondrites.” These are fairly uncommon and fashioned within the internal photo voltaic system some 4.6 billion years in the past, in temperatures exceeding 662 levels Fahrenheit (350 levels Celsius).

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