Over the last hundred years, the human population has exploded from about 1.5
billion to more than seven billion, driving an ever-increasing demand for
resources. To satisfy civilization's appetite, communities have expanded
recycling efforts while mine operators must explore forbidding frontiers to seek
out new deposits, opening mines miles underground or even at the bottom of the
ocean.
Asteroids could one day be a vast new source of scarce material if the
financial and technological obstacles can be overcome. Asteroids are lumps of
metals, rock and dust, sometimes laced with ices and tar, which are the cosmic
"leftovers" from the solar system's formation about 4.5 billion years ago. There
are hundreds of thousands of them, ranging in size from a few yards to hundreds
of miles across. Small asteroids are much more numerous than large ones, but
even a little, house-sized asteroid should contain metals possibly worth
millions of dollars.
There are different kinds of asteroids, and they are grouped into three
classes from their spectral type – a classification based on an analysis of the
light reflected off of their surfaces. Dark, carbon-rich, "C-type" asteroids
have high abundances of water bound up as hydrated clay minerals. Although these
asteroids currently have little economic value since water is so abundant on
Earth, they will be extremely important if we decide we want to expand the human
presence throughout the solar system.
"Water is a critical life-support item for a spacefaring civilization, and it
takes a lot of energy to launch it into space," says Dante Lauretta of the
University of Arizona, Tucson, principal investigator for NASA’s OSIRIS-REx
asteroid sample return mission. "With launch costs currently thousands of
dollars per pound, you want to use water already available in space to reduce
mission costs. The other thing you can do with water is break it apart into its
constituent hydrogen and oxygen, and that becomes rocket fuel, so you could have
fuel depots out there where you're mining these asteroids. The other thing
C-type asteroids have is organic material – they have a lot of organic carbon,
phosphorous and other key elements for fertilizer to grow your food," said
Lauretta.
Somewhat brighter asteroids have a stony composition. These "S-type"
asteroids have very little water but are currently more economically relevant
since they contain a significant fraction of metal, mostly iron, nickel and
cobalt.
"However, there are a fair amount of trace elements that are economically
valuable like gold, platinum and rhodium," said Lauretta. "A small, 10-meter
(yard) S-type asteroid contains about 1,433,000 pounds (650,000 kg) of metal,
with about 110 pounds (50 kg) in the form of rare metals like platinum and
gold," said Lauretta.
There are rare asteroids with about ten times more metal in them, the
metallic or "M-class" asteroids, according to Lauretta.
However, it currently costs hundreds of millions to billions of dollars to
build and launch a space mission, so innovations that would make these costs
fall dramatically are needed before it is profitable to mine asteroids for the
value of their metals alone.
Another obstacle is simply our lack of experience with mapping and analyzing
the resources in asteroids to extract material from them. This critical
experience will be gained with NASA's asteroid sample return mission, OSIRIS-REx
(Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, Security and
Regolith Explorer).
The spacecraft, scheduled for launch in September 2016, will arrive at the
asteroid Bennu in October 2018 and study it in detail before returning with a
sample of material from its surface. Its primary purpose is scientific -- since
asteroids are relics from our solar system's formation, analysis of the sample
is expected to give insights into how the planets formed and life originated.
Also, the spacecraft will accurately measure how the tiny push from sunlight
alters the orbit of Bennu, helping astronomers better predict this influence on
the path of any asteroid that presents an impact risk to Earth.
"However, the mission will develop important technologies for asteroid
exploration that will benefit anyone interested in exploring or mining
asteroids, whether it's NASA or a private company," said Lauretta.
The mission is designed to have triple redundancy for its sample acquisition
– if the first attempt fails, the team can try two more times to get at least 60
grams (about two ounces) of sample, and up to 2,000 grams (about 4.4 pounds). To
make the most of these opportunities, the spacecraft is equipped with
instruments that map the asteroid's composition from orbit, allowing the team to
select the best sample sites well in advance of the first attempt.
A good way to determine an asteroid's composition from a distance is to
analyze its light. All materials reflect, emit, and absorb light at specific
colors or frequencies depending on the properties of the material. The make-up
of a material can be identified using special instruments called spectrometers
which measure the intensity of light at different frequencies.
Materials emit and absorb light over an extremely wide range of frequencies,
well beyond what our eyes can see, so OSIRIS-REx has three spectrometers that
together cover this range in the X-ray, visible and infrared.
The OSIRIS-REx Visible and Infrared Spectrometer (OVIRS) detects visible and
near-infrared light. Infrared light is invisible to the human eye, but we can
feel it as heat. This spectrometer will be able to detect organic compounds in
addition to a variety of minerals and other chemicals. Organic compounds contain
carbon and are of interest because some are used by life. The team hopes to
sample a site rich in organic molecules for clues to the organic chemistry in
the early solar system that led to the emergence of life on Earth. "OVIRS will
help map the distribution of organic molecules on the asteroid and guide sample
site selection based on that information," said Lauretta.
The OSIRIS-REx Thermal Emission Spectrometer (OTES) goes deeper into the
infrared range and will detect minerals on the surface of Bennu and measure the
temperature of the asteroid. In particular, clay minerals found by OTES will
provide a map of the water-rich material on the asteroid. Just as beach sand
heats up quickly in the sun and cools off rapidly at night while the pavement
stays hot long after sunset, the rate at which the surface warms in the day and
cools at night will be used to measure the surface properties.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=U-VR6pNi70k
(Video of mission)
The Regolith X-ray Imaging Spectrometer will look at the faint X-ray glow of
the sunlit surface to map the distribution and abundance of elements, such as
iron, silicon, sulfur, and magnesium.
OVIRS and OTES also will work together to determine the influence of sunlight
on Bennu's orbit. This influence, called the Yarkovsky effect, happens when the
surface of an asteroid absorbs sunlight and later radiates it as heat while the
asteroid rotates, giving the asteroid a tiny push, which adds up over time to
significantly change its trajectory.
OVIRS will reveal how much sunlight is reflected from Bennu. Since what's not
reflected must be absorbed, the team can use this measurement to calculate how
much sunlight is being stored by the asteroid to be later radiated as heat. OTES
will measure this heat and provide a map to show which areas on Bennu radiate
the most, giving the direction of the Yarkovsky push.
The light detected by the spectrometers doesn't penetrate far, so these
instruments can identify composition only in a thin layer near the surface, not
more than about one-half of a millimeter deep (about a hundredth of an inch).
It's likely that Bennu's composition changes deeper in its interior. The
mission's sampling mechanism will go deeper by blowing nitrogen gas to agitate
material near the surface, forcing it to flow into a collection chamber.
"We'll get down five or six centimeters (around two inches) with this
technique," says Lauretta. Although still relatively shallow, it is about 200
times deeper than with spectrometry alone.
"Also, the spectroscopists will tell us that they know the composition of
this material, but at the end of the day, we get to test that," adds Lauretta.
"We'll bring a sample back to the lab and say, alright you guys said it was made
out of this, we found it was made out of that, did you get it right or not?"
Other instruments will help refine the composition maps from the
spectrometers. The smallest features in the OVIRS chemistry maps will be about
20 meters (yards) across, while the OTES mineralogy features are even bigger, at
about 40 meters across. Color maps from the cameras will have much higher
resolution, less than a meter, so any variations in color over a feature in the
chemistry and mineralogy maps from the spectrometers gives a clue that perhaps
the composition changes a bit in those areas, according to Lauretta.
Similar to radar, the laser altimeter instrument will bounce laser light off
the surface of Bennu to build a three-dimensional map of its shape and surface
features. Measuring how brightly the surface reflects the laser light can give a
clue to the type of material present; for example, a really bright reflection
could indicate they hit a metallic spot, according to Lauretta.
Although developed for science, the instruments on OSIRIS-REx are similar to
those necessary for an asteroid mining mission.
"The mission will be a proof-of-concept – can you go to an asteroid, get
material, and bring it back to Earth," said Lauretta. "Next, people will have to
industrialize it so that the economy works out, so for the recoverable value in
any given asteroid, you're spending half that to bring it back."
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