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Study Finds Evidence of More Organic Material on Ceres

Accepted submission by takyon at 2018-06-15 22:42:42
Science

Organic Matter on Dwarf Planet Ceres More Abundant than Thought [sci-news.com]

A new analysis of data collected by NASA's Dawn orbiter suggests that organic molecules may exist in surprisingly high concentrations on the surface of Ceres. The study [wiley.com] [DOI: 10.1029/2018GL077913] [DX [doi.org]] appears in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

[...] To get an initial idea of how abundant those compounds might be, researchers compared the [Visible and Infrared Spectrometer] data from Ceres with lab reflectance spectra of organic material formed on Earth. Based on that standard, they concluded that 6-10% of the spectral signature they detected on Ceres could be explained by organic matter.

But for this the new study, Southwest Research Institute researcher Hannah Kaplan [geohannah.com] and co-authors wanted to re-examine those data using a different standard. Instead of relying on Earth rocks to interpret the data, they turned to an extraterrestrial source: meteorites. Some meteorites have been shown to contain organic material [sci-news.com] that's slightly different from what's commonly found on our own planet. And the new analysis shows that the spectral reflectance of the extraterrestrial organics is distinct from that of terrestrial counterparts. [...] "We estimate that as much as 40-50% of the spectral signal we see on Ceres is explained by organics. That's a huge difference compared to the 6-10% previously reported based on terrestrial organic compounds."

[...] There are two competing possibilities for where Ceres' organics may have come from. They could have been produced internally on Ceres and then exposed on the surface, or they could have been delivered to the surface by an impact from an organic-rich comet or asteroid.

Previously: Organic Molecules Found on Ceres [soylentnews.org]

Related: Dawn Spies Magnesium Sulphate and Possible Geological Activity on Ceres [soylentnews.org]
Ceres May Have Had a Global Surface Ocean in the Past [soylentnews.org]


Original Submission