11-12-2021, 09:09 AM
A mysterious object near the Earth is the first known space rock made of what looks like a piece of the moon, a new study reveals. It may, in fact, have split off the moon in an ancient collision with an asteroid.
The space rock, called Kamo'oalewa, was discovered in 2016. It has been the target of study by Vishnu Reddy, an associate professor in cosmochemistry and planetary astronomy at the University of Arizona, and his PhD student Benjamin Sharkey.
Reddy regularly studies space rocks discovered in the vicinity of Earth for NASA's Planetary Defence Coordination Office, which keeps track of space-based dangers. Kamo'oalewa, however, had resisted his attempts to analyze its composition for several years.
When Sharkey showed Reddy his latest observations of the elusive space rock, the two couldn't believe their eyes.
"We couldn't believe the way it was looking because it was unlike anything we've seen before," Reddy told Space.com.
The results, Reddy said, didn't match any of the known more than 2,000 near-Earth asteroids analyzed before.
https://www.space.com/near-earth-space-r...n-material
https://www.livescience.com/amp/kamooale...n-fragment
The space rock, called Kamo'oalewa, was discovered in 2016. It has been the target of study by Vishnu Reddy, an associate professor in cosmochemistry and planetary astronomy at the University of Arizona, and his PhD student Benjamin Sharkey.
Reddy regularly studies space rocks discovered in the vicinity of Earth for NASA's Planetary Defence Coordination Office, which keeps track of space-based dangers. Kamo'oalewa, however, had resisted his attempts to analyze its composition for several years.
When Sharkey showed Reddy his latest observations of the elusive space rock, the two couldn't believe their eyes.
"We couldn't believe the way it was looking because it was unlike anything we've seen before," Reddy told Space.com.
The results, Reddy said, didn't match any of the known more than 2,000 near-Earth asteroids analyzed before.
https://www.space.com/near-earth-space-r...n-material
https://www.livescience.com/amp/kamooale...n-fragment