Water on Asteroid Bennu Could Mean 'Pay Dirt' for Space Miners

NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft captured this image of the asteroid Bennu on Dec. 12, 2018. The asteroid may be a water-rich target for space miners.
NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft captured this image of the asteroid Bennu on Dec. 12, 2018. The asteroid may be a water-rich target for space miners. (Image credit: NASA/Goddard/University of Arizona)

The near-Earth asteroid Bennu could be Exhibit A for space miners making their case to skeptical investors.

New observations by NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft suggest that the 1,650-foot-wide (500 meters) Bennu harbors lots of accessible water, a key resource that prospective asteroid miners aim to target. 

Water can be split into its constituent hydrogen and oxygen, the chief components of rocket fuel. This stuff can then be sold at off-Earth "gas stations," where spacecraft could fill their tanks up on the go, mining advocates have stressed.

Related: OSIRIS-REx: NASA's Asteroid-Sampling Mission in Pictures

"For an asteroid miner, Bennu is pay dirt," OSIRIS-REx principal investigator Dante Lauretta, of the University of Arizona, told Space.com. "That is exactly the kind of target that we want to go to and process [for] a propellant depot that people have been envisioning for the first profitable asteroid mine."

Studying Bennu up close

The $800 million OSIRIS-REx mission launched in September 2016 and slipped into orbit around Bennu on Dec. 31 of last year. This latter event was an epic achievement: Bennu is the smallest object ever to be circled by a spacecraft.

OSIRIS-REx is making valuable observations from Bennu orbit, but much of the mission's science data will be gathered here on Earth. If all goes according to plan, the probe will snag a sample of Bennu material in July 2020, then deliver that stuff to Earth in a special return capsule arriving in September 2023. 

The main goal of the mission is to learn more about the solar system's early days and to better understand the role that dark, carbon-rich asteroids such as Bennu may have played in life's emergence on Earth. That role is suspected to be significant; scientists think asteroids may have delivered much of our planet's water, as well as lots of complex organic molecules — the building blocks of life as we know it.

But OSIRIS-REx has several subsidiary objectives, as indicated by its full name: "Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, Security-Regolith Explorer." The "security" bit refers to information that could help humanity better deal with potentially hazardous space rocks, a broad class that counts Bennu as a member. And "resource identification" is a nod to the nascent asteroid-mining industry, which needs to know which rocks to go after.

Related: Images: Potentially Dangerous Asteroids

This image of the asteroid Bennu shows a view from NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft (left) and a spectrum analysis of its composition.  (Image credit: NASA/Goddard/University of Arizona/Arizona State University)

In December, the OSIRIS-REx team announced the detection of hydrated clay minerals on Bennu's surface. The find indicated that water was likely abundant in the interior of Bennu's parent asteroid long ago, the scientists said at the time. (Team members think Bennu is a rubble pile consisting of pieces of that shattered asteroid, which may have been about 62 miles, or 100 kilometers, wide. Bennu may harbor chunks of the impactor as well.)

The new results, which Lauretta and his colleagues announced today (March 19), confirm and extend that recent discovery: OSIRIS-REx has now spotted the apparent signature of the iron-oxide mineral magnetite on Bennu's surface.

Magnetite is "typically indicative of very intense hydrothermal activity," Lauretta said. 

A candidate sample site on asteroid Bennu for NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft. (Image credit: NASA/Goddard/University of Arizona)

He and the mission team haven't yet nailed down the origin of this activity. But the leading theory holds that Bennu's parent asteroid formed far away from the newborn sun, incorporating significant amounts of water ice and organics, along with rocky and metallic material. Some radioactive elements, such as aluminum-26, got sucked up as well, and the heat thrown off by this stuff likely melted lots of that native ice.

"Water probably did circulate through the interior of the asteroid, like a hydrothermal system on Earth, and altered the originally anhydrous rocky material, forming these clays," Lauretta said. The flow also "probably altered the metals to produce iron oxides, like the magnetite."

This likely happened very early on, he added — within the first 10 million years or so of the solar system's existence.

To be clear: The water we're talking about on present-day Bennu isn't stand-alone and pure; it's locked up in those clays, in the form of hydroxyl groups (one oxygen atom and one hydrogen atom bonded together). But it is likely accessible: Hydroxyl can be baked out of clays, generating water vapor, asteroid-mining advocates say. 

Picture of Bennu taking shape

The magnetite find is just one of many discoveries Lauretta and his colleagues announced today in seven papers, which were published in the journals Nature, Nature Astronomy, Nature Geoscience and Nature Communications. The team also discussed the results during a news conference today at the 50th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference (LPSC) in The Woodlands, Texas.

For example, OSIRIS-REx's observations suggest that Bennu's rotation rate is speeding up, likely because of the reradiation of solar energy as heat — something known as the Yarkovsky-O'Keefe-Radzievskii-Paddack (YORP) effect. It currently takes Bennu about 4.3 hours to complete one rotation; if this spin speedup continues apace, that rotational period will be cut in half in 1.5 million years, Lauretta said.

The team also determined Bennu's bulk density to be about 72.3 lbs. per cubic foot (1,190 kilograms per cubic meter) and the asteroid's interior to be about 50 percent open space. Both of these numbers indicate that Bennu is a rubble pile rather than a solid block of rock, the scientists said.

And then there's the asteroid's surface. By counting craters, the team has estimated that Bennu formed between 100 million and 1 billion years ago, likely after a mammoth collision in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. (Bennu's move to a near-Earth orbit occurred quite recently; such paths tend to be stable for just 10 million years or so, mission team members said, because of gravitational encounters with Earth and other rocky planets.)

Related: The Asteroid Belt Explained: Space Rocks by the Millions (Infographic)

The abundance of visible craters may force a rethink about how asteroids such as Bennu and Ryugu, which Japan's Hayabusa2 spacecraft is currently studying up close, got their striking diamond shapes. The leading explanation posits that this shape results from a fast spin, which causes loose asteroid material to migrate to equatorial regions. But such migration would be expected to bury many craters, so perhaps something else is going on.

"We're actively re-evaluating that model," Lauretta said.

The team also found that, on average, Bennu reflects just 4.4 percent of the sunlight hitting it, making the asteroid one of the darkest objects in the solar system. But Bennu is far from uniform; along with very dark patches, it sports much brighter regions, some of which have reflectivities of 15 percent to 20 percent.

And in a real shocker, OSIRIS-REx observed particles streaming from Bennu's surface multiple times in January and February, meaning the space rock is one of just a dozen or so known "active asteroids." It's unclear what's causing this activity, but the team is keen to investigate it, Lauretta said.

No other spacecraft has ever witnessed such asteroid activity up close, he added.

Sample-gathering may be tougher than thought

Bennu's surface diversity also manifests as rocky ruggedness, which has surprised the mission team. Radar imagery by big, ground-based dishes such as the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico had revealed just one boulder with a width of between 33 feet and 66 feet (10 to 20 meters). Those data, and the suspected spin-induced equatorial migration of material, gave the OSIRIS-REx researchers reason to think Bennu is pretty smooth, at least at low latitudes.

"Everything was self-consistent and suggested a lot of centimeter-scale particles, probably concentrated in the equator," Lauretta said. "And I was really envisioning kind of a beach that went all the way around the asteroid in equatorial regions."

But reality is very different from this prediction. OSIRIS-REx has spotted more than 200 boulders in the 33-to-66-foot size range so far, and the biggest boulder-free patches the probe has found to date measure between 16.5 feet and 66 feet (5 to 20 m) wide, one of the new papers reported.

That's an issue, because the mission design calls for OSIRIS-REx to grab a sample from a boulder-free patch at least 165 feet (50 m) in diameter. 

"We have to upgrade the autonomous guidance system on the spacecraft, so it can be a lot smarter and guide us into that smaller region," Lauretta said.

The team will also have to collect a lot more high-resolution imagery of the landing site than previously anticipated, he added.

Lauretta said he's confident the team will make everything work, though sample collection may have to be pushed back a bit as a result. But the team has some leeway; the sampling operation can be performed as late as October 2020 with no significant effect on the mission timeline, Lauretta added. 

The OSIRIS-REx team takes heart from the success of Hayabusa2, which grabbed samples from rugged Ryugu last month. And Lauretta and some colleagues will travel to Japan in April to get information and advice from Hayabusa2 team members, especially about how Ryugu's surface behaved during the sampling sortie, he said.

"That's still our biggest uncertainty — what is the nature of this material in the microgravity environment?" Lauretta said. "What forces are holding it together, and how does it respond when a spacecraft punches it in and then fires thrusters to back away from it?" 

The Hayabusa2 team, by the way, unveiled a raft of new results today, as well, in three papers in the journal Science and at LPSC. The Japanese mission has determined that the 3,000-foot-wide (900 m) Ryugu is likely relatively dry, though it's carbon-rich and diamond-shaped like Bennu.

Ryugu may be drier because it has resided in the inner solar system longer than Bennu or has swung closer to the sun on its various orbits, Lauretta said. 

Related: Our Solar System: A Photo Tour of the Planets

"You haven't seen anything yet"

The new OSIRIS-REx results come from observations made during the probe's approach to Bennu last summer and fall, and its early days orbiting the space rock. There's a lot more to come, as the science team analyzes more-detailed data and imagery.

For example, OSIRIS-REx hasn't confirmed the presence of organics on Bennu's surface, but the probe hasn't really had a chance to look yet. The observations that may do the trick will be performed seven or eight weeks from now, if all goes according to plan, Lauretta said.

"The science is really starting to ramp up," he said. "You haven't seen anything yet."

And we may have to wait a few years for the most exciting results. Hayabusa2's sample is scheduled to land on Earth in December 2020, and OSIRIS-REx's won't touch down until nearly three years later.

"That's really exciting," Lauretta said. "You can learn a lot by bringing a sample back from an asteroid, but we're going to learn exponentially more by bringing samples back from these two asteroids, which initially looked very similar to each other, may still be related to each other but have had different histories."

Mike Wall's book about the search for alien life, "Out There" (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), is out now. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook

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Mike Wall
Senior Space Writer

Michael Wall is a Senior Space Writer with Space.com and joined the team in 2010. He primarily covers exoplanets, spaceflight and military space, but has been known to dabble in the space art beat. His book about the search for alien life, "Out There," was published on Nov. 13, 2018. Before becoming a science writer, Michael worked as a herpetologist and wildlife biologist. He has a Ph.D. in evolutionary biology from the University of Sydney, Australia, a bachelor's degree from the University of Arizona, and a graduate certificate in science writing from the University of California, Santa Cruz. To find out what his latest project is, you can follow Michael on Twitter.