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Asteroid Bennu: Key Ingredients for Life Discovered

by Rachel Kim – Technology Editor

Sugars ‍Essential⁢ to Life Discovered in Asteroid Bennu, Says NASA ‌Scientist

WASHINGTON – Samples returned from the asteroid Bennu have yielded a groundbreaking discovery: the presence of ribose and glucose, sugars crucial⁢ to life ‌as we know ‌it. This marks the frist time these sugars have been‍ definitively identified in an asteroid⁣ sample, ‌according⁢ to ⁢a NASA scientist involved in the analysis.

“This ⁤is a pivotal moment in our understanding of the origins of life,” stated Dr. Yvette⁣ Pendleton, lead astrobiologist on the Bennu sample analysis team, in a press​ briefing ⁢today. “Finding ribose, a key component of RNA, alongside glucose, a primary energy source for living organisms, strongly supports the theory that⁤ the building blocks ⁤of life could have⁤ been delivered‌ to Earth from space.”

The bennu samples also ​contain‌ all five nucleobases – adenine, ⁢guanine, cytosine, ⁤thymine, and uracil – which are essential to the genetic code of both DNA and RNA. Furthermore, analysis⁣ revealed at least 14 ‌of the 20 amino acids used in Earth biology were present ‍within the asteroid material.

Beyond these core components, the samples indicate Bennu ‌formed in the outer Solar System,‍ evidenced by ammonia levels 75 times higher⁢ than those found in the Ryugu asteroid. Scientists believe Bennu’s composition has ‌remained largely unchanged for 4.5 billion years, effectively making it a “time capsule” preserving the chemical conditions of ⁣the early Solar System.

Previous studies had indicated⁢ the presence of liquid water within Bennu, reacting with minerals to create organic compounds. These ⁣new findings confirm that‍ this process was prolific enough to perhaps contribute to the formation of ⁤life’s foundations.

“The richness of⁣ organic material in Bennu is remarkable,” Dr.‍ Pendleton explained. “It demonstrates that the necessary ingredients for life were‍ not unique ‌to Earth, but could have been widely distributed throughout the early solar system.”

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