WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.010 --> 00:00:01.730 [ music ] 2 00:00:01.750 --> 00:00:06.710 My name is Jason Dworkin. I'm the director of the Astrobiology Analytical Laboratory at NASA Goddard. 3 00:00:06.730 --> 00:00:10.380 I'm also the Project Scientist for OSIRIS-REx. 4 00:00:10.400 --> 00:00:13.150 5 00:00:13.170 --> 00:00:18.480 We're interested in studying the origin and evolution of life on the Earth and other bodies in the solar system, 6 00:00:18.500 --> 00:00:21.880 from the perspective of understanding simple organic chemistry. 7 00:00:21.900 --> 00:00:29.250 We don't understand what happened in the ancient Earth. Most of that record is lost by subduction and other geochemical processes. 8 00:00:29.270 --> 00:00:35.250 However, meteorites and the asteroid Bennu witnessed the chemistry of the early solar system. 9 00:00:35.270 --> 00:00:40.380 A problem with studying meteorites is that they invariably land on the ground: 10 00:00:40.400 --> 00:00:45.680 they land in ice in Antarctica, for example, or in dirt or soil, 11 00:00:45.700 --> 00:00:49.630 and life very rapidly contaminates these samples. 12 00:00:49.650 --> 00:00:54.080 By going to collect the samples from an asteroid we can keep the samples pristine, 13 00:00:54.100 --> 00:01:01.780 by having very tight controls over what the spacecraft is made out of and how it's returned, and archived and distributed around the world. 14 00:01:01.800 --> 00:01:04.030 15 00:01:04.050 --> 00:01:10.440 OSIRIS-REx is a NASA mission which launches in 2016 and goes to the near-Earth asteroid Bennu, 16 00:01:10.460 --> 00:01:15.070 which is a organic-rich, very dark, primitive asteroid, 17 00:01:15.090 --> 00:01:20.460 orbits the asteroid for about a year, studies it in great detail, and then collects a sample, 18 00:01:20.480 --> 00:01:23.980 and returns it to the Earth for worldwide distribution and study. 19 00:01:24.000 --> 00:01:29.780 Samples from Bennu will be returned to Earth in 2023. They land at the UTTR facility in Utah, 20 00:01:29.800 --> 00:01:34.090 then are transported to the Johnson Space Center in Houston. 21 00:01:34.110 --> 00:01:36.240 22 00:01:36.260 --> 00:01:42.080 Any scientist in the world can write a proposal to request some sample and justify what they'll get from it. 23 00:01:42.100 --> 00:01:45.700 The Bennu samples will contain riches which can be studied today 24 00:01:45.720 --> 00:01:49.310 and are in many ways beyond technology right now to study. 25 00:01:49.330 --> 00:01:54.500 For example, in this laboratory we've been studying samples brought back by the Apollo missions. 26 00:01:54.520 --> 00:01:59.940 The analysis is being performed by a woman who was not born yet when the samples were returned, 27 00:01:59.960 --> 00:02:04.600 using instrumentation that was not designed, asking questions not thought possible. 28 00:02:04.620 --> 00:02:10.160 This is the value of sample return: it's a gift to the Earth that keeps giving generation after generation 29 00:02:10.180 --> 00:02:16.880 as technologies advance and as new people come up with new questions that we're not smart enough now to think about. 30 00:02:16.900 --> 00:02:20.400 [ music ] 31 00:02:20.420 --> 00:02:32.332 [ satellite beeping ]