Glycine was discovered in a sample from a comet. Glycine is an amino acid. This picture shows four different ways chemists use to show a molecule of glycine.
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Molecule model images courtesy of Ben Mills.

Stardust Finds Amino Acid in Comet Samples

Scientists have found a type of amino acid in a sample returned from a comet. Amino acids are the building-blocks of proteins. Proteins are one of the most important types of molecules in living creatures. The comet sample was brought back to Earth by NASA's Stardust spacecraft.

Some scientists think that complex molecules might form in space. Some complex molecules, like amino acids, may have helped life get started. Maybe some of the complex molecules formed in space and were brought to Earth on comets. Maybe that's how life on Earth got started. What if complex molecules were carried to other planets, too? Could that help life get started on those planets? We don't know the answers to these questions for sure. That's why finding an amino acid on a comet is important.

The comet that the Stardust spacecraft visited is called Comet Wild 2. Stardust flew by the comet in January 2004. Stardust used a strange material called aerogel to collect material from the comet. The spacecraft actually flew through the comet's thin atmosphere. Scientists at NASA led by Dr. Jamie Elsila found the amino acid in the comet samples. The amino acid they found is called glycine. It is the simplest kind of amino acid.

Last modified August 27, 2009 by Randy Russell.

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