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The future of Stardust science
Authors:A. J. Westphal  J. C. Bridges  D. E. Brownlee  A. L. Butterworth  B. T. De Gregorio  G. Dominguez  G. J. Flynn  Z. Gainsforth  H. A. Ishii  D. Joswiak  L. R. Nittler  R. C. Ogliore  R. Palma  R. O. Pepin  T. Stephan  M. E. Zolensky
Affiliation:1. Space Sciences Laboratory, U.C. Berkeley, Berkeley, California, USA;2. Leicester Institute for Space and Earth Observation, Department of Physics & Astronomy, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK;3. Department of Astronomy, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA;4. U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, District of Columbia, USA;5. California State University at San Marcos, San Marcos, California, USA;6. State University of New York, Plattsburgh, New York, USA;7. Hawaii Institute of Geophysics and Planetology, University of Hawai'i at Mānoa, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA;8. Department of Terrestrial Magnetism, Carnegie Institute of Washington, Washington, District of Columbia, USA;9. Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA;10. Department of Physics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA;11. Department of Physics and Astronomy, Minnesota State University, Mankato, Minnesota, USA;12. Department of the Geophysical Sciences, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA;13. ARES, NASA JSC, Houston, Texas, USA
Abstract:Recent observations indicate that >99% of the small bodies in the solar system reside in its outer reaches—in the Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud. Kuiper Belt bodies are probably the best‐preserved representatives of the icy planetesimals that dominated the bulk of the solid mass in the early solar system. They likely contain preserved materials inherited from the protosolar cloud, held in cryogenic storage since the formation of the solar system. Despite their importance, they are relatively underrepresented in our extraterrestrial sample collections by many orders of magnitude (~1013 by mass) as compared with the asteroids, represented by meteorites, which are composed of materials that have generally been strongly altered by thermal and aqueous processes. We have only begun to scratch the surface in understanding Kuiper Belt objects, but it is already clear that the very limited samples of them that we have in our laboratories hold the promise of dramatically expanding our understanding of the formation of the solar system. Stardust returned the first samples from a known small solar system body, the Jupiter‐family comet 81P/Wild 2, and, in a separate collector, the first solid samples from the local interstellar medium. The first decade of Stardust research resulted in more than 142 peer‐reviewed publications, including 15 papers in Science. Analyses of these amazing samples continue to yield unexpected discoveries and to raise new questions about the history of the early solar system. We identify nine high‐priority scientific objectives for future Stardust analyses that address important unsolved problems in planetary science.
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