Researchers Discover Phosphorus – an Element Necessary for Life – in Particles Collected From a Comet

Comet Illustration

An international study found phosphorus and fluorine in solid dust particles from a comet. This suggests that comets may have delivered crucial elements for life to Earth.

An international study led by the University of Turku discovered phosphorus and fluorine in solid dust particles collected from a comet. The finding indicates that all the most important elements necessary for life may have been delivered to the Earth by comets.

Researchers have discovered phosphorus and fluorine in solid dust particles collected from the inner coma of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko. It takes the comet 6.5 years to orbit the Sun.

The dust particles have been collected with the COmetary Secondary Ion Mass Analyser (COSIMA). The instrument was on-board the European Space Agency’s Rosetta spacecraft which tracked the comet at a few kilometers distance between September 2014 and September 2016. The COSIMA instrument collected the dust particles directly in the vicinity of the comet. Three 1cm2 target plates were photographed remotely. The particles were selected from these images and finally measured with a mass spectrometer. All the steps were controlled from Earth.

The detection of phosphorus (P+) ions in solid particles is contained in minerals or metallic phosphorus.

“We have shown that apatite minerals are not the source of phosphorus, which implies that the discovered phosphorus occurs in some more reduced and possibly more soluble form,” says the project leader Harry Lehto from the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Turku.

This is the first time that life-necessary CHNOPS elements are found in solid cometary matter. Carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur were reported in previous studies by the COSIMA team from e.g. organic molecules. The discovered phosphorus, or P, is the last one of the CHNOPS elements. The discovery of P indicates cometary delivery as a potential source of these elements to the young Earth.

Fluorine was also detected with CF+ secondary ions originating from the cometary dust. The first discovery of CF gas was from interstellar dust in 2019. CF+ is an ion now discovered on the comet and its characteristics in cometary environment are still unknown.

Reference: ” The detection of solid phosphorus and fluorine in the dust from the coma of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko” by Esko Gardner, Harry J Lehto, Kirsi Lehto, Nicolas Fray, Anaïs Bardyn, Tuomas Lönnberg, Sihane Merouane, Robin Isnard, Hervé Cottin, Martin Hilchenbach and the COSIMA team, 25 September 2020, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/staa2950

The study was led by the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Turku. The study was funded by the Academy of Finland.

1 Comment on "Researchers Discover Phosphorus – an Element Necessary for Life – in Particles Collected From a Comet"

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