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"We have perhaps a 50 percent chance" of retrieving samples, Sakamoto said. The Japanese space agency said the aim of the $200 million project was to understand the origin and evolution of the solar system, as well as paving the way for future sample return missions. Sakamoto said any samples from an asteroid, considered the building blocks of planets, could also shed light on the origins of the Earth. Scientists hope to study how and when the asteroid was formed, its physical properties, what other bodies it may have been in contact with, and how solar wind and radiation have affected it. Hayabusa was originally due to return to Earth in 2007 but a series of technical glitches
-- including a deterioration of its ion engines, broken control wheels, and the malfunctioning of electricity-storing batteries
-- forced it to miss its window to maneuver into the Earth's orbit until this year. If Hayabusa is indeed carrying asteroid samples, it would be only the fourth space sample return in history
-- including moon matter collected by the Apollo missions, comet material by Stardust, and solar matter from the Genesis mission. Preliminary analysis of the samples will be carried out by the team of Japanese, American and Australian scientists in Japan. After one year, scientists around the world can apply for access to the asteroid material for research.
[Associated
Press;
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