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Space

Small Near-Earth Asteroid Surfaces Have Few Precious Metals, Study Finds (arxiv.org) 44

RockDoctor (Slashdot reader #15,477) writes: A recent paper on ArXiv reports new spectroscopic analyses of the surfaces of 42 asteroids. The main result for space enthusiasts is that there is not one "M" class asteroid (metal-rich) surface in the collection.

The imagery that (many) people grow up with from Hollywood and TV "science" "documentaries" is that the Solar system is full of asteroids which are made of metal ready for mining to produce solid ingots of precious metals. That's Hollywood, not reality. This result is about what you'd expect from the proportion of metallic asteroids — otherwise estimated at about 0.5% of the population.

The asteroid mining fraternity dream of taking apart an M-type asteroid like Psyche, which is fair enough as a dream. Even as a dream for "asteroid mining" metal market speculators. But they are relatively rare asteroids. A realistic "ISRU" (In-Situ Resource Utilisation) plan is going to have to expect to digest around 200 silicate mineral (and clay ("phyllosilicate"), and ice) asteroids for every metallic one they digest.

Here's the home page for the project.
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Small Near-Earth Asteroid Surfaces Have Few Precious Metals, Study Finds

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  • you only need one (Score:4, Informative)

    by mtaht ( 603670 ) on Saturday March 18, 2023 @05:24PM (#63381051) Homepage
    .5% of several million asteroids is quite a lot, and honestly one as big as Psyche too big and a PITA. What you want is one, nice, small (hundreds of meters, not kilometers) asteroid, in a better orbit than that one... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      You know, I normally think about how one would sinter regolith into hollow aeroshells and eject them onto Earth aerocapture trajectories...but imagine the haul if you could turn a whole (small!!!) metallic asteroid into a hollow, stable aeroshell-shaped entry body and redirect it to a minimum-energy entry trajectory. You'd need to have a landing ellipse where nobody's going to mind if you make really big waves on splashdown, mind you! But it'd (pardon the pun) cause global platinum-group metal costs to cra

  • Despite the summary's claims, I don't recall a plethora of movies featuring metal-rich near-earth asteroids.

    • Despite the summary's claims, I don't recall a plethora of movies featuring metal-rich near-earth asteroids.

      Nothing really comes easily to mind except perhaps The Expanse ...

    • by drnb ( 2434720 )

      Despite the summary's claims, I don't recall a plethora of movies featuring metal-rich near-earth asteroids.

      Nor movies or scientists saying most asteroids have useful minerals. What I recall is prospecting, have to go find one that has something useful.

      That said, 0.5%, 1 in 200, is huge given the number up there.

  • Metallic elements are heavy and would not tend to be on the surface of said asteroid... Just saying.

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      As a general rule, metallic asteroids are undifferentiated. So yes, they are.

      • Probably because the reason they are metallic is they are a core fragment of a larger asteroid that had impacts heat and concentrate the heavier elements to the center before being destroyed themselves leaving many undifferentiated metallic chunks. So originally no, unless they get smashed open.
        • The predominant theory behind the formation of metallic, "M-class" asteroids is, indeed, that they are the inner parts of formerly larger asteroids, which have had their silicate mantles smashed off by (probably) multiple impacts of comparable-sized objects.
      • Actually no, TTBOOurK, "metallic" or "M-class" asteroids are differentiated. The common elements (oxygen, half the Earth by volume), silicon, aluminium, magnesium have been drastically reduced (essentially by floatation) and relatively uncommon elements (iron, nickel) have been concentrated (by that same floatation mechanism).

        Yes, iron is the "most stable nucleus" (in terms of binding energy per nucleon) so it is the end point of the nucleosynthesis chain. In the microseconds before a star goes supernova,

  • First you see what resources you have available, then you figure out how you can use them.

    If there's that much silicon to be had, we figure out how to grow large usable crystals in space to use for structures. If it's easier to get iron or aluminum, we use that.

    Yeah, yeah, Kryptonians [blogspot.com] already did it.

    Without worrying about beauty initially, if we can turn an asteroid into a quartz countertop as a first pass, at least we can cook the space worms.

    • excuses.
      are for those who can not.
      for others.
      it is a fertile field of what can be used to further accomplishments

    • by dpilot ( 134227 )

      I wanted to say something similar. Even if it's not iron, it's mass and it's already out of Earth's gravity well. We can figure out what to do with it - even if it's turning it into something like concrete structures - that's valuable, too.

      • Up-thread Rei talks about using some form of magnetic separation of particles to beneficiate the asteroid material into some sort of high-density ore. (It seems he was under the misapprehension that the various ore minerals which hold "precious" metals might also be magnetic. Quite why he thought that, I don't know, but that's what he seems to think.)

        (Also, thank you EditorDavid for uselessly adding "precious metals" to my original submission, a point I only held in scorn.)

        Magnetic separation would work,

    • If there's that much silicon to be had,

      Silicon, on it's own, is very uncommon on Earth, or in space. It is almost always combined with oxygen into silicate minerals - the most common being olivine which has one (Mg or Fe) atom, one silicon atom, and approximately 4 oxygen atoms. (The oxidation state of the iron, +2 or +3, being the reason for "approximately".)

      Extracting metallic silicon from silicate minerals is appreciably harder than extracting iron from iron ores. That's why ("rocky") planets (and aste

  • Ice is nice. (Score:4, Informative)

    by techno-vampire ( 666512 ) on Saturday March 18, 2023 @05:31PM (#63381061) Homepage
    In astronomy, ice doesn't always mean frozen water, or even dry ice. (Frozen CO2.) Anything that would be a gas at normal Earth temperatures and pressure but solid out in Space is considered to be an ice. That means that an icy asteroid might be a great source for oxygen, carbon (both from CO2), nitrogen and many other industrially useful compounds that can either be used to build and maintain stations out there, or to manufacture things that can be shipped to Earth and used here.
    • Anything that would be a gas at normal Earth temperatures and pressure but solid out in Space is considered to be an ice.

      It's a bit more complicated than that, because the pressure of the inner solar system is so low, materials are meaningfully volatile - they're sublimate and blow away in less than millions of years - as much as 50K below their sea level melting points. It's further complicated because only a thin layer of mineral dust (millimetres to a couple of centimetres) is sufficient to stabilise "vo

  • by ByTor-2112 ( 313205 ) on Saturday March 18, 2023 @07:17PM (#63381271)

    One out of 200? When you have millions? If you told me I could dig 200 holes and have a 50% chance of finding a platinum mine, I'd grab a shovel right now.

  • Is it possible the outsides won't tell us what is inside?

    How likely is it that a substance we care about would be on the outer edge vs. being hidden inside? I'd guess that would depend on the strength and brittleness of the substances we hope to extract vs. the cruft we don't.

  • Please pass on by.
  • And I bet he'd be your bestest friend ever.

    https://memory-alpha.fandom.co... [fandom.com]

  • "estimated at about 0.5% of the population"

    That's 1 in 200, given the number of asteroids up there that is an incredibly huge number. And I seem to recall the word "prospecting" used quite often in association with asteroids and useful minerals, so the premise that most are expected to have useful amounts of something is erroneous.

    How many hills on earth have useful quantities of some ore that justifies mining? I'm going to guess less that 0.5%.

  • Why would you digest 200 silicate asteroids to get to the metallic asteroid? You can fly around the silicate ones - they are in space not stacked in a pile.

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