Medical and Hospital News  
IRON AND ICE
Japanese lab finds 'minute particles' in asteroid pod

The "Hayabusa" Landing On The Asteroid "Itokawa" Artist's Concept By Akihiro Ikeshita
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) July 5, 2010
Japan's space agency said Monday it has found "minute particles" of what it hopes is asteroid dust in the capsule of the space probe Hayabusa which returned to Earth last month.

Scientists hope any dust samples from the potato-shaped asteroid Itokawa could help reveal secrets about the origins of the solar system.

"We have started the opening process of the sample container of Hayabusa since June 24, 2010 and confirmed there are minute particles," the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) said.

But the agency added it remained unclear whether the particles are contaminants from Earth or come from Itokawa, which the space probe landed on during its multi-billion-kilometre (mile) journey.

It is expected to take months to get the final results of the analysis.

Hayabusa project manager Junichiro Kawaguchi said scientists believed materials from Earth were among the particles found in the pod.

"But it's important that it wasn't empty... I'm glad that there is the possibility" that some are from the asteroid, Kawaguchi told a press briefing.

Researchers have not fully opened the capsule yet but have found more than 10 specks visible to the naked eye, said another JAXA scientist, Toshifumi Mukai.

Mukai conceded these particles may not have come from the asteroid.

"I have a feeling that they are not cosmic dust," he said, adding that it was also possible that they were from deep space.

Separately, an electron microscope found two more minute particles, estimated to be slightly bigger than 10 microns each, scientists said. One micron is one-millionth of a metre.

When Hayabusa was launched in 2003, the canister was open, meaning it may contain materials that originated on Earth, a JAXA spokesman said.

Technical problems plagued the journey of Hayabusa, which at one stage spun out of control and lost contact with JAXA for seven weeks, delaying the mission for three years until the asteroid and Earth re-aligned.

When it finally latched onto the Itokawa asteroid, a pellet-firing system designed to stir up dust malfunctioned, leaving it unclear how much material the probe was able to gather.

After a seven-year space odyssey, the heatproof pod was fired back to Earth by the Hayabusa probe in June.

Researchers at JAXA's Sagamihara Campus near Tokyo, have been opening the multi-layered canister in cooperation with US space agency NASA.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Asteroid and Comet Mission News, Science and Technology



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


IRON AND ICE
Students Record Spellbinding Video Of Disintegrating Spacecraft
Huntsville AL (SPX) Jun 29, 2010
Last year, high school science teacher Ron Dantowitz of Brookline, Mass., played a clever trick on three of his best students. He asked them to plan a hypothetical mission to fly onboard a NASA DC-8 aircraft and observe a spacecraft disintegrate as it came screaming into Earth's atmosphere. How would they record the event? What could they learn? For 6 months, they worked hard on their assi ... read more







IRON AND ICE
Peru declares emergency after mining dam collapse

24 dead in China shuttle bus fire: govt

Years of prison, but no justice for Haiti's women inmates

Reading sessions help Haiti children through quake trauma

IRON AND ICE
Skyhook Wireless Partners With Samsung Electronics For Leading Location System

Telogis Expands Reach Into Construction And Heavy Lifting Sectors

Global Number Of Traffic Information Users To Exceed 370 Million By 2015

Carrier Corp. Greens Commercial Vehicle Fleet

IRON AND ICE
Tibetan Adaptation To Altitude Took Less Than 3,000 Years

A Butterfly Effect In The Brain

China To Hit 1.4 Billion As Medvedev Fears Falling Population In Russia's East

Genetic markers can predict longevity

IRON AND ICE
Countries to draft tiger rescue plan in Indonesia:

Escaped South African hippo shipped out of sewerage works

Why You Should Never Arm Wrestle A Saber-Toothed Tiger

Flying The North Basin

IRON AND ICE
11.5 percent HIV/AIDS prevalence in Mozambique: report

WHO probe grapples with differing views on flu pandemic

Secret Ingredient In Honey That Kills Bacteria

Hong Kong study promises new swine flu treatment

IRON AND ICE
Celebrations and sadness as Dalai Lama turns 75

Lenovo says Apple missing huge opportunities in China

China sentences another Tibetan environmentalist

China orders online sellers to register personal details

IRON AND ICE
Gunmen seize 12 sailors in ship attack off Nigeria: navy

Singapore ship with Chinese crew hijacked off Somalia

Sudan says Cyprus 'arms ship' contains mining explosives

Islamists, unpaid troops hit Somali regime

IRON AND ICE
Walker's World: A doube-dip recession?

China revises 2009 growth up to 9.1 percent

China's manufacturing activity slows in June

Outside View: Outlook earkens for economy


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement