Author Topic: This Asteroid Held Liquid Water Much More Recently Than We Thought  (Read 52 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Buster's Uncle

  • Geo's kind, I unwind, HE'S the
  • Planetary Overmind
  • *
  • Posts: 53545
  • €517
  • View Inventory
  • Send /Gift
  • Because there are times when people just need a cute puppy  Soft kitty, warm kitty, little ball of fur  A WONDERFUL concept, Unity - & a 1-way trip that cost 400 trillion & 40 yrs.  
  • AC2 is my instrument, my heart, as I play my song.
  • Planet tales writer Smilie Artist Custom Faction Modder AC2 Wiki contributor Downloads Contributor
    • View Profile
    • My Custom Factions
    • Awards
This Asteroid Held Liquid Water Much More Recently Than We Thought
« on: September 10, 2025, 09:11:02 pm »
This Asteroid Held Liquid Water Much More Recently Than We Thought
Carly Cassella
ScienceAlert
Wed, September 10, 2025 at 11:00 AM EDT
3 min read



This Asteroid Held Liquid Water Much More Recently Than We Thought


The famous asteroid, Ryugu, is drip-feeding scientists crucial information about its watery past.

Using a tiny, 80-milligram sample of the near-Earth asteroid, researchers have discovered evidence that liquid water was sloshing about within the rock much more recently than scientists believed was possible.

The findings suggest that Ryugu's parent asteroid hosted liquid water for an astonishingly long time, without evaporating, degassing, or chemically reacting with minerals.

"It was a genuine surprise!" says geochemist Tsuyoshi Iizuka from the University of Tokyo.

"We found that Ryugu preserved a pristine record of water activity, evidence that fluids moved through its rocks far later than we expected."

Before it was born, Ryugu was part of a 'planetesimal' – the seed of a planet – that was forming on the outer reaches of our Solar System about 4.565 billion years ago.

Made from accumulating ice and dust, the frozen protoplanet seems to have thawed a billion years after its formation.

It's possible that the thaw occurred after a collision, which fractured and heated the planetesimal, melting its buried ice and allowing water to flow.

That very collision, or perhaps one after, could have burst the protoplanet like a water balloon, spraying liquid-filled asteroids into the inner Solar System.

If that's true, then similar rocky bodies that struck young Earth billions of years ago may have delivered two to three times more water than standard models account for.



Aqueous activity on Ryugu and its parent body. (1) The Ryugu parent body accreted from ice and dust. (2) Ice melting due to short-lived radioactive heating. (3) The saturated water refroze upon cooling, forming interstitial ice. (4) More than 1 billion years later, an impact generated heat, resulting in a limited escape of fluid. (5) Ryugu migrated from the main belt to the near-Earth orbit about 5 million years ago and has significantly degassed water since then. (Iizuka et al., Nature 2025)


The apparent paucity of moisture in the inner early Solar System has long been a problem for the hypothesis that asteroids first delivered water to Earth, seeding our planet's oceans and atmospheres.

Ryugu could be the missing key. Nor is it the only asteroid that seems to defy our understanding of how water copes on rocky objects without atmospheres to protect them.

"The idea that Ryugu-like objects held on to ice for so long is remarkable," says Iizuka.

"It suggests that the building blocks of Earth were far wetter than we imagined. This forces us to rethink the starting conditions for our planet's water system."

The chemical record from Ryugu is based on the radioactive decay of lutetium-176 (176Lu) to hafnium-176 (176Hf).

When liquid water is present, it interrupts the way this decay occurs. In Ryugu samples, the ratio of 176Lu to 176Hf was completely different from that of Earthly meteorites (asteroids that have actually crashed into our planet).

"This meant we had to carefully rule out other possible explanations and eventually concluded that the Lu-Hf system was disturbed by late fluid flow," says Iizuka.

Today, Ryugu is all dried out, but its chemical composition speaks volumes about the conditions in our early Solar System.

The asteroid hypothesis for Earth may hold water after all.

The study was published in Nature.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/asteroid-held-liquid-water-much-150010951.html

 

* User

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?


Login with username, password and session length

Select language:

* Community poll

SMAC v.4 SMAX v.2 (or previous versions)
-=-
24 (7%)
XP Compatibility patch
-=-
9 (2%)
Gog version for Windows
-=-
106 (33%)
Scient (unofficial) patch
-=-
40 (12%)
Kyrub's latest patch
-=-
14 (4%)
Yitzi's latest patch
-=-
89 (28%)
AC for Mac
-=-
3 (0%)
AC for Linux
-=-
5 (1%)
Gog version for Mac
-=-
10 (3%)
No patch
-=-
16 (5%)
Total Members Voted: 316
AC2 Wiki Logo
-click pic for wik-

* Random quote

To understand a thing is to know the manner by which it might be destroyed. A fundamental understanding of the basic building-blocks of the Universe is essential, then, to the total destruction of everything.
~Foreman Domai 'One Tool, One Thought'

* Select your theme

*
Templates: 5: index (default), PortaMx/Mainindex (default), PortaMx/Frames (default), Display (default), GenericControls (default).
Sub templates: 8: init, html_above, body_above, portamx_above, main, portamx_below, body_below, html_below.
Language files: 4: index+Modifications.english (default), TopicRating/.english (default), PortaMx/PortaMx.english (default), OharaYTEmbed.english (default).
Style sheets: 0: .
Files included: 45 - 1228KB. (show)
Queries used: 36.

[Show Queries]