HOUSTON, Tex.—Building 31 on the campus of Johnson Space Center lacks the Tower of London’s majesty and history. No Queen’s Guard stand outside. But this drab, 1960s-era building is nonetheless where NASA keeps the crown jewels of its exploration program. Inside various clean rooms, curators watch over meteorites from Mars and the asteroid belt, cosmic dust, samples of the solar wind, comet particles, and, of course, hundreds of kilograms of Moon rocks.
In late December, Ars spent a day visiting these collections, including the rarely accessed Genesis Lab. While our request for a Moon rock keepsake was sadly rebuffed, we nonetheless got a VIP tour of every astromaterial NASA has collected from other bodies in the Solar System and beyond. With Senior Space Editor Eric Berger providing the words and Senior Technology Editor Lee Hutchinson capturing the photos, we can now offer an unprecedented look at how NASA protects its rarest and most valuable off-world samples.
Antarctic meteorites
To start, we wanted to see the famous Mars rock.
Before entering NASA’s meteorite lab, we had patiently removed our wedding rings and then donned booties, a surgeon’s cap, and a white gown. From the changing room, we moved into a small chamber for an air shower to remove loose particles from ourselves—it felt a bit like one of those hurricane “simulators” at an amusement park. Finally, we walked into a brightly lit, sterile room where NASA keeps asteroids that scientists collect in Antarctica.
The collection houses about 20,000 rocks, but the most famous of those rocks is ALH84001. Sometime around 16 million years ago, a large meteorite or asteroid 0.5 to 1 km across or larger struck the Martian surface and blasted some rocks into space at a speed greater than the red planet’s escape velocity. One of them flew through space until about 13,000 years ago when it crashed into Antarctica. A team of scientists funded by the National Science Foundation found it during the winter of 1984, although they didn’t know it had come from Mars at the time.
Americans weren’t the first people to realize that Antarctica was the best place in the world to find meteorites. Japanese researchers had been traveling there to collect them since the 1960s. When University of Pittsburgh geologist William Cassidy learned of their successful discovery of all kinds of meteorites in 1973, he convinced the National Science Foundation to fund US expeditions. By 1976, Americans were joining the Japanese scientists in the field; the NASA lab was created two years later to house the samples.
Meteorites are stored inside cabinets filled with nitrogen to prevent rusting.
Lee Hutchinson
Meteorites are stored inside cabinets filled with nitrogen to prevent rusting.
Lee Hutchinson
And it takes a lot of cabinets to hold 20,000 meteorites.
Lee Hutchinson
And it takes a lot of cabinets to hold 20,000 meteorites.
Lee Hutchinson
When processed for study by outside researchers, the meteorites are handled with gloves inside the cabinets.
Lee Hutchinson
When processed for study by outside researchers, the meteorites are handled with gloves inside the cabinets.
Lee Hutchinson
And it takes a lot of cabinets to hold 20,000 meteorites.
Lee Hutchinson
When processed for study by outside researchers, the meteorites are handled with gloves inside the cabinets.
Lee Hutchinson
Although the meteorites were unprotected for thousands of years in Antarctica, curators do the best they can to prevent further deterioration.
Lee Hutchinson
Each meteorite is kept frozen until it reaches the lab, where it is quickly dried out.
Lee Hutchinson
Kevin Righter gave us a tour of the lab that rocked!
Lee Hutchinson
Sometimes you have to take notes in a clean room.
Lee Hutchinson
Sometimes the rocks get a little grabby.
Lee Hutchinson
Meteorites or body parts, no one knows for sure.
Lee Hutchinson
Umm, NASA?!?
Lee Hutchinson
Here’s where we were disabused of any stray particles in an air shower before entering the lab.
Lee Hutchinson
Behold, it’s ALH84001!
Lee Hutchinson
Although the flux of meteorites into Antarctica is no different from anywhere else in the world, the continent has an arid, cold environment with few people, helping meteorites stay intact. The geography helps as well. As massive sheets of ice flow away from the South Pole, they run up against the Transantarctic Mountains, a tall range running 3,500 km across the continent. The ice increasing in thickness as it piles up against the mountains, meteorites fall onto the wide, flat polar region and are swept up in this flow, which turns upward upon reaching the mountains.
“As this ice turns up, the right combination of elevation and temperature creates an ablation zone for the ice, and the meteorites stay behind,” explained Kevin Righter, a planetary scientist and the Antarctic meteorite curator. “There are areas on the ridge with incredible concentrations of meteorites.”
The rocks are kept frozen until they reach the lab in Houston. This prevents further rusting and alteration of minerals that can occur at higher temperatures. Once in the lab, scientists thaw the rocks in a warm, dry environment that rapidly carries the moisture away. Afterward the rocks are kept inside nitrogen cabinets to prevent further oxidation.
About a decade after scientists found ALH84001, they realized it and about a dozen others like it almost certainly came from Mars, because it contained traces of gas just like those in the Martian atmosphere.
This led to an unexpected surge of interest in the lab. As Johnson Space Center’s Dave McKay and other scientists examined the rock, they found tiny, odd features that resembled worm-like fossils. Upon this basis, the group published a 1996 article in the journal Science in which they claimed to have found evidence of ancient life on Mars. Overnight, the Antarctic meteorite lab became one of the hottest places in the world. Scientists and journalists alike clambered to get inside.
Today, with NASA rovers scrambling all over the surface of Mars, one might think finding new Martian rocks in Antarctica, where they have been exposed to Earth’s atmosphere for thousands of years, would not be scientifically useful. That view is wrong, Righter said.
Early reports of evidence of life in ALH84001 were very likely premature.
Credit:
NASA
Early reports of evidence of life in ALH84001 were very likely premature.
Credit:
NASA
“Martian meteorites are still of great interest,” he explained. “We’ve gotten a lot of great information about Mars from the rovers, and a lot of the emphasis has been on finding rock evidence of flowing water, volatiles, and things that might relate to life. However when we collect Mars rocks here on Earth, there’s not a lot of evidence for those kinds of processes in the meteorites. So we think we might be missing a significant portion of the rock diversity on Mars in our current collection. If we actually found a piece of sedimentary rock from Mars there are so many kinds of measurements you could make in labs on Earth compared to what we can do with robotic missions.”
In addition to its Mars rocks, NASA has hundreds of meteorites from the large asteroid Vesta, and some they believe come from other bodies in the asteroid belt. There are also meteorites from the Moon, and Righter said these offer a valuable diversity compared to our sampling at the six lunar landing sites. Then there are a few dozen “oddball” meteorites, which scientists cannot trace. Could one of them have originated on Venus or Mercury? It’s possible, Righter said. The discovery of new, interesting meteorites is why scientists return to Antarctica every November.
As for ALH84001, Righter retrieved the bagged meteorite in short order. “This is it,” he said, setting it onto a scale. “You can see it’s a big hunk of rock.” It was a big hunk of rock. Shortly after the watershed paper in Science, a majority of the scientific community came up with other, seemingly more plausible explanations for the small fossil-like tunnels. The rock is lifeless today and probably always has been.
Still, the search goes on. If the Universe is going to bring chunks of other worlds to Earth, the least we can do is go and pick them up.
Comets and stardust
It stood on a table, right there in front of us. Eleven years ago, this tennis racquet-shaped tray of 132 tiles, each filled with aerogel, flew through the coma of Comet Wild 2. Passing within 240 miles of the nucleus, it captured tiny bits of a comet for the first time. The Stardust spacecraft then safely returned to Earth in 2006. Now, nearly a decade later, researchers are still carefully inspecting each tile to find and collect dust particles that became embedded in the aerogel.
The aerogel itself is kind of a magical substance. It looks like frozen smoke. With a density 1,000 times less than glass, it is essentially air. And yet it is perfect for stopping dust particles smaller than a grain of sand, traveling six times the speed of a rifle bullet. The particles create tracks through the aerogel before stopping, yet don’t end up being destroyed.
One of 132 aerogel tiles that were flown through Comet Wild 2. The streaks represent particle tracks through the aerogel.
Lee Hutchinson
One of 132 aerogel tiles that were flown through Comet Wild 2. The streaks represent particle tracks through the aerogel.
Lee Hutchinson
This is the tennis-racquet shaped tray of aerogels that flew through the comet.
Lee Hutchinson
This is the tennis-racquet shaped tray of aerogels that flew through the comet.
Lee Hutchinson
Another view of the aerogel tray.
Lee Hutchinson
Another view of the aerogel tray.
Lee Hutchinson
This is the tennis-racquet shaped tray of aerogels that flew through the comet.
Lee Hutchinson
Another view of the aerogel tray.
Lee Hutchinson
Here’s a wider view of an aerogel tile being prepped for analysis.
Lee Hutchinson
Here’s the impact of a dust particle after entering the aerogel traveling six times faster than a rifle bullet.
Lee Hutchinson
Microscopes are used to get a better view of the particles and their tracks.
Lee Hutchinson
A wedge of the gel is then cut out to retrieve the particle.
Lee Hutchinson
We are about to science the $hi+ out of this lab and make potatoes from comet dust.
Lee Hutchinson
After examination the aerogels are stored in a special cabinet to preserve them.
Lee Hutchinson
In science your records don’t go gold or platinum, they go glass. Here, lab manager Ron Bastien shows off his latest hit.
Lee Hutchinson
Ron Bastien, manager of the Stardust lab, held one of the tiles up for inspection during our visit. “If you look closely at this, that line running down through it, that’s an impact where a small particle hit that aerogel and traveled down through it,” he said. “If you look down at the bottom of that track there would be a particle.” More accurately, this is a particle from a comet now hundreds of millions of miles away.
Dozens of research groups have examined the cometary material. To their surprise, they found that comets formed under both icy and white-hot conditions. Scientists had understood the ice of comets formed at the frigid edge of the Solar System beyond Neptune, but now they realized that the rocky cores formed much closer to the Sun.
They know this because some of the particles collected by Stardust were white and irregularly shaped. These Calcium Aluminum Inclusions are believed to have formed very near the surface of the Sun at the fiery inception of the Solar System. They are among the most ancient materials in the Solar System at 4.56 billion years old. And now scientists had found them in comets that traveled to Pluto and beyond. This gave scientists further confidence that, in studying comets further, they were truly looking at time capsules that could tell them much about how the Solar System formed.
Because the aerogel tray was only exposed to the comet for a relatively short period of time, the Stardust mission performed double duty by carrying a second tray of tiles.
During the long flight to and from Comet Wild 2, the spacecraft exposed this second tray to collect interstellar dust. Unlike the profusion of comet particles, scientists only expected to collect a few of the tiny interstellar particles, about a micron in size, coming into the Solar System at odd angles. So after the spacecraft returned to Earth, the scientists asked for help finding them.
They set up an automated scanning microscope in the Stardust lab to capture images of the entire interstellar collector, and scientists invited the public—“dusters”—to help find particle tracks in individual tiles through the Stardust@Home project.
In August, 2014, they announced that they had found seven interstellar dust particles, the first samples of dust from stars outside of the Solar System. Dusters had found two of the particles. Even now, scientists are only beginning to understand the nature of these particles, some of which are “fluffy” like snowflakes and may have come from a supernova explosion millions of years ago.
Genesis
We had been suiting up for the better part of half an hour when Judith Allton paused to ask us a question: “I forgot to ask you guys, do you need a restroom break?” Fortunately, we didn’t.
NASA keeps some of its most sensitive samples in the “Genesis” lab, which has the most rigorous cleanliness protocols of any facility at the space center. The Genesis lab houses particles from the solar wind, essentially tiny bits of the Sun which hold clues about the composition of the solar nebula at the time when the planets formed.
That morning we had been instructed to not wear wedding rings, nor scented deodorant. In the anteroom we had donned gloves, booties, and hair nets. In the “gowning” room, we had put on masks, full-body polyester suits, head covers, boots over the body suit and booties, and a second pair of gloves. Also, they’d taken my notepad and given me “clean” paper—once inside I’d receive a clean Sharpie pen. Nor did our photography equipment escape the cleanroom regime: we had to spend several minutes rubbing down cameras and lenses and tripods with alcohol wipes until the scientists were satisfied that the devices were reasonably dust-free.
After this entire process, we asked if the lab gets a lot of visitors. “I don’t take people in,” Allton, the lab’s curator, said. “You guys are special. The main reason is, people are dirty.”
The Genesis spacecraft carried wafers of various high-purity materials, including aluminium, sapphire, silicon, germanium, gold, and more to collect different types of solar wind.
Lee Hutchinson
The Genesis spacecraft carried wafers of various high-purity materials, including aluminium, sapphire, silicon, germanium, gold, and more to collect different types of solar wind.
Lee Hutchinson
Sometimes the best place to do an interview is in a clean room.
Lee Hutchinson
Sometimes the best place to do an interview is in a clean room.
Lee Hutchinson
Then came head coverings.
Lee Hutchinson
Then came head coverings.
Lee Hutchinson
Sometimes the best place to do an interview is in a clean room.
Lee Hutchinson
Then came head coverings.
Lee Hutchinson
Somewhere in here there are two holes for our legs.
Lee Hutchinson
The full body suit is almost fully secure.
Lee Hutchinson
Last, booties over your booties.
Lee Hutchinson
Aww, intrepid photographer Lee Hutchinson wants to be in the gallery too.
Lee Hutchinson
Now that we’re finally inside the lab, Allton shows off the ultrapure water station. Uh-oh, my right outer bootie is sagging.
Lee Hutchinson
The water flows into the spinning machine, at left, where each wafer is cleaned for up to 15 minutes.
Lee Hutchinson
Carla Gonzalez shows how to ever so delicately place a wafer into the spinning machine.
Lee Hutchinson
For maximum science, look here.
Lee Hutchinson
Everybody wears booties over booties in the Genesis lab.
Lee Hutchinson
Cleaned wafers go in these cabinets.
Lee Hutchinson
After your spacecraft crashes into Earth at 300 kph there will be some breakage of your priceless wafers.
Lee Hutchinson
“So hey, are these wafers clean enough to eat off of?”
Lee Hutchinson
Sometimes the best place to do an interview is in a clean room.
In 2001 NASA’s Genesis spacecraft launched into space and traveled to the L1 Lagrange point, where the gravity between Earth and the Sun cancel one another out. For more than two years, the spacecraft’s arrays collected ions flowing from the outer layer of the Sun. Wafers made of various high-purity materials, including aluminium, sapphire, silicon, germanium, gold, and diamond-like amorphous carbon, were designed to collect different types of solar wind.
It was hoped the spacecraft would collect billions of solar particles, equal in weight to a few grains of salt, before flying back to Earth. But during the final phase of its return, the spacecraft’s parachute system failed, and it crashed into the Utah desert at a catastrophic speed of 300 kph.
It could have been game over. For most experiments it would have been game over. But the solar wind particles were embedded some 40 to 100 nanometers below the surface. The team of researchers, including Allton, found they could salvage some of those particles if they carefully cleaned the bits of wafers that survived the collision with Earth. “We had envisioned that we would get the whole panel back here in one piece, under a nitrogen purge,” Allton said. “Well, that’s not what we ended up with.”
The Genesis spacecraft crashed into a Utah desert.
Credit:
NASA
The Genesis spacecraft crashed into a Utah desert.
Credit:
NASA
So the scientists adapted. Inside the brightly lit, clean room, Carla Gonzalez showed us how by turning a flow of ultrapure water onto a sample wafer spinning at several thousand rpm. Over the course of 15 minutes, she used the water to clean terrestrial dirt and spacecraft debris from the wafer. This process left no solvents behind. In the decade since Genesis returned to Earth, Allton, Gonzalez, and others have cleaned and classified more than 2,000 samples, many of which are now available to scientists for research.
This processing has worked. Scientists have met most of the mission’s research objectives, including making the surprising discovery that the Sun is richer in oxygen-16, the most common isotope, than the Earth. This discrepancy has led scientists to study how this oxygen got stripped away from the Sun during its first few million years of existence, which in turn has led to new insights about the nature and development of the early Solar System.
As we neared the end of our tour in the impeccably clean laboratory, Gonzalez removed the sample wafer from the ultrapure water. I asked if it was now so clean we could eat off of it. “I suppose so,” Allton said. “But it would break my heart if you did.”
Moon rocks
Ryan Zeigler smiled broadly, his round face accentuated by a clean room cap covering his head, as he stood in front of a shiny, multi-ton bank vault door. “Well guys, I saved the best for last,” he said. Zeigler studies lunar rocks at Johnson Space Center with the aim of better understanding how the Moon formed. He’s also a curator of the Apollo samples, and he’d arranged for our tour of all the astromaterials labs at NASA.
Now we stood outside the vault where more than two-thirds of all the Moon rocks in the world were stored.
Ryan Zeigler said he was saving the best for last. Here, standing at the entrance to the long-term Moon rock vault, it became clear he wasn’t kidding. (Also, that wall is NOT an exit.)
Lee Hutchinson
Ryan Zeigler said he was saving the best for last. Here, standing at the entrance to the long-term Moon rock vault, it became clear he wasn’t kidding. (Also, that wall is NOT an exit.)
Lee Hutchinson
Upon entering the vault, there are lots of Moon rocks on the right.
Lee Hutchinson
Upon entering the vault, there are lots of Moon rocks on the right.
Lee Hutchinson
And on the left. This cabinet contains Apollo 12 samples. The stainless steel cabinets cost about $250,000 in 1978.
Lee Hutchinson
And on the left. This cabinet contains Apollo 12 samples. The stainless steel cabinets cost about $250,000 in 1978.
Lee Hutchinson
Upon entering the vault, there are lots of Moon rocks on the right.
Lee Hutchinson
And on the left. This cabinet contains Apollo 12 samples. The stainless steel cabinets cost about $250,000 in 1978.
Lee Hutchinson
A close up of the Apollo 12 samples vault.
Lee Hutchinson
This is how you know the Apollo 12 samples go in here.
Here’s a pristine lunar core sample in a vacuum container, not opened since it was packed on the surface of the Moon.
Lee Hutchinson
Segmented lunar core samples, on a tray.
Lee Hutchinson
The moon rocks are kept under a positive pressure.
Lee Hutchinson
We’re outside of the vault now, in the “public” room where samples are processed for outside researchers.
Lee Hutchinson
The “public” sample container with Moon rock samples on display. It is visible from hallways where visitors can walk through without suiting up.
Moon rocks on display. I want one!
Lee Hutchinson
A close-up view of Moon rock 15459, a large, dense, regolith breccia
from Spur Crater collected by the Apollo 15 mission. It’s a whopping 5 kg.
Lee Hutchinson
Another rock collected by the Apollo 15 astronauts, 15556. It is an extremely vesicular basalt containing small olivine phenocrysts.
Lee Hutchinson
Zeigler shows Berger a round sample inside one of the cabinets.
Lee Hutchinson
The lab predates personal computers, so all cuts to each sample have been carefully tracked by hand.
Lee Hutchinson
The “Genesis Rock” is proudly displayed in the public room.
Lee Hutchinson
What do I need to do to make a souvenir Moon rock deal happen?
Lee Hutchinson
Hutchinson can science, too.
Lee Hutchinson
A final view from inside the vault: the Apollo 11 cabinet. We didn’t get inside of it to hold any rocks, but Buzz Aldrin did on his visit to the lab. For the record, we’re OK with that.
Lee Hutchinson
Then we entered. Built from 1977 to 1979, the facility houses collections from Apollo 11 through Apollo 17, which are stored in separate stainless steel cabinets. Astronauts brought a total of 2,200 samples back during the six Apollo missions. And while about 85 percent of the collection remains in pristine condition, there are now more than 100,000 lunar rock samples to track. “NASA’s inspector general could show up at any time and ask to see a particular sample, and we have to be able to find it,” Zeigler explained.
It felt a bit alien in that room. The rocks themselves weren’t visible; they were carefully packed away, inside metal containers and teflon bags, triple-sealed inside the cabinets, which themselves are filled with pure nitrogen. “A huge amount of effort goes into keeping these lunar samples safe for future generations,” Zeigler said. But even out of sight, one could feel the tons of rocks. They had all once sat on the Moon’s surface for billions of years, then had been picked up by one of a dozen humans’ hands, blasted off the lunar surface, and then splashed down into the Pacific Ocean. And now they all rested, silently, in this room. Alien, indeed.
Despite the precautions, however, the “opened” samples cannot be preserved indefinitely. Even inside their triple-sealed containers, the ultrapure nitrogen contains 10 to 100 parts-per-billion of water. The Moon rocks don’t show signs of rusting, but perhaps the outer nanometer or two of each one has been contaminated. Zeigler led us over to one cabinet. “These have never been opened,” he said. “These are three of our seven unopened samples.” They were collected in the vacuum of the lunar surface, placed inside vacuum sealed tubes, and remain that way to this day. NASA is preserving them for some theoretical future where science has progressed to enable some new, powerful method of analysis.
About 70 percent of all the Moon rocks are stored in this one room. Roughly five percent have been destroyed during various research processes, and about 15 percent are kept in a backup vault at White Sands in New Mexico. Sure, Johnson Space Center is secure, and this facility is on the second floor. But the space center is just across the street from Clear Lake, which drains into Galveston Bay, which drains into the Gulf of Mexico. It’s conceivable a Category 5 hurricane could destroy this facility.
Zeigler walks us out of the vault and into a similarly sized work room where the rest of the Moon rocks are. Here there are great chunks of the Moon displayed in more stainless steel cabinets. This is where return samples are processed—the lab still hands out 500 to 1,000 lunar samples a year to scientists for study—before going back into the vault. It’s also where VIPs are brought to be shown Moon rocks.
Among the samples on display is the so-called “Genesis rock,” which appears to have been coated by powdered sugar. The crew of Apollo 15 had been tasked with searching for just such an anorthosite rock, and they found it near the Apennine Mountains. Dating to 4.1 billion years old, within a few hundred million years of the Solar System’s formation, the Genesis rock helped validate the theory that the Moon formed after a Mars-sized object collided with Earth in the very early Solar System.
There was simply nowhere to go from there. Our day in these fascinating labs at the space center was over. No, we didn’t get to hold a Moon rock. When Buzz Aldrin visited this lab, he threw a bit of a fit when told even he couldn’t hold a rock he collected on the Moon’s surface. Eventually Aldrin got his way, but we aren’t, alas, Apollo astronauts. As for a sample to take home, that’s an honor accorded only to sovereign countries. Ars will have to get to work on that.
Eric Berger is the senior space editor at Ars Technica, covering everything from astronomy to private space to NASA policy, and author of two books: Liftoff, about the rise of SpaceX; and Reentry, on the development of the Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon. A certified meteorologist, Eric lives in Houston.