FIRST SAMPLE of BENNU, touchdown !

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– exclusive STATEMENT from BRIAN MAY part of the OSIRIS-REx mission + leader PROFESSOR DANTE LAURETTA

Sir Brian May and Professor Dante Lauretta Naturall History Muaeum
Sir Brian May and Professor Dante Lauretta Natural History Muaeum

Touchdown!  As first ever sample of Bennu – believed to be the most hazardous asteroid in the universe – landed today in the Utah desert, Brian May says,  

 “Today is the day – the long awaited day – when the sample of a piece of material From Bennu – the asteroid most likely to hit the Earth in the future, is recovered to Earth. This box when it is opened of material from the surface of Bennu can tell us untold secret of the origins of the universe, the origins or our planet and the origins of life itself. What an incredibly exciting day. Tune into Nasa TV. Go to the OSIRIS-REx website. Read my new book for the full story  – Bennu 3-D –  written with leader of the mission, Dante Lauretta. And enjoy this wonderful forward step in our knowledge of the universe.” 

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/KigEian8AZg

What many do not know, is that Brian – along with his colleague, Claudia Manzoni – played a crucial role in the OSIRIS-REx mission, creating stereoscopic images from the O-REx data that enabled leader, Professor Dante Lauretta,  and his team to locate a safe landing site for sample collection.

To celebrate, Dante and Brian further collaborated to publish  – BENNU 3-D: ANATOMY OF AN ASTEROID, the only book to explore the full story of the asteroid from formation to this current mission and with stereoscopic 3-D imagery that brought the mission to success. The book comes with a 3-D viewer designed by Brian May to bring these images to life.

Available to buy from https://shop.londonstereo.com/astronomy-books.html 

Professor Dante Lauretta, leader of the  OSIRIS-REx mission, and author of Bennu 3-D: Anatomy of an Asteroid says – 
“The delivery of samples from asteroid Bennu by the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft is the culmination of almost two decades of intense effort. I am thrilled to share this adventure with the world as we enter the final stage of the mission – sample analysis.”