This is the quote that I thought somewhat odd:

"Understanding the chemical composition of asteroids will help us to understand 
how the planets were
made. But the only asteroids we see on Earth are as scorched remains, as 
meteorites, not the raw
substance itself."



In unweathered meteorites, below the fusion crust, aren't meteorites "the raw 
substance itself"?


 





http://www.news24.com/News24/Technology/News/0,,2-13-1443_1765747,00.html

Spacecraft targets asteroid 
06/09/2005 13:02  - (SA)   

England - Rivals from the United States and Europe get the bigger headlines and 
bigger budgets, but
a little-noticed Japanese mission to a distant space rock may scoop them all. 

Launched on May 9 2003, the little probe Hayabusa ("Falcon") is now on the 
brink of rendezvousing
with a 630-metre asteroid on a mission that could prove historic. 

If all goes well, Hayabusa will be the first spacecraft to bring home raw 
material from an asteroid,
part of the primeval rubble left over from the making of the Solar System. 

"It is an utterly remarkable project which has been given almost little 
coverage in the media,"
Patrick Michel, a French astrophysicist who is involved in the mission, said on 
Monday. 

"Understanding the chemical composition of asteroids will help us to understand 
how the planets were
made. But the only asteroids we see on Earth are as scorched remains, as 
meteorites, not the raw
substance itself." 

Hayabusa, driven by an ion engine, a slow-but-steady form of propulsion which 
leaves maximum volume
for scientific instruments, is now just 750 kilometres from the asteroid 
Itokawa, the mission
website (www.jaxa.jp) of the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency, said on 
Monday. 

White-knuckle part of the mission

In November comes the white-knuckle part of the mission, said Michel. 

Hayabusa will gingerly manoeuvre itself to within a few metres of Itokawa and 
then fire a projectile
weighing about five grams into the surface at a speed of 300 metres per second, 
or around 1 800kms
an hour. 

If the arithmetic is right and luck is on Hayabusa's side, material will be 
kicked out of the
asteroid and some of it will shoot up a slender funnel. 

The pellets are scheduled to be shot at three different sites in the asteroid, 
with each tiny sample
being carefully stowed away onboard. 

The spacecraft will also deploy a little robot, about the size of a large beer 
can, called Minerva,
which for a couple of days will "hop" around the asteroid's surface, taking 
pictures and measuring
the temperature. 

Then it will be time to head for home. In June 2007, Hayabusa's precious 
payload, of just 100
milligrams, should land in the Australian Outback. 

The United States and the European Space Agency (ESA) have deployed huge 
resources on media-friendly
missions to analyse comets and other primitive phenomena. 

They include ESA's Rosetta, a $1.2bn mission, due to climax in 2014, to deploy 
a robot lab on a
comet and analyse its soil and transmit the data back home. 

In its Deep Impact mission, the US fired a metal projectile into a comet last 
July, using remote
sensors to analyse the gas and dust spewed out by the impact. 

Another US craft, Stardust, is due to return next year with material scooped by 
flying through the
wake of a comet. 

And it sent a spacecraft, Genesis, to capture samples of the solar wind. The 
craft crashed into the
Utah desert in September 2004, but some of its samples were saved. 

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