Sir Brian May praises Osiris-Rex team as asteroid samples land on Earth

Sir Brian May has said he is ‘immensely proud’ to be part of the Osiris-Rex team who have successfully collected Nasa’s first asteroid samples from deep space.

A capsule containing around 250g of rocks and dust collected from asteroid Bennu touched down in the Utah desert near Salt Lake City on Sunday (September 24).

Earlier in the day, the Osiris-Rex spacecraft released the sample capsule around 63,000 miles out during a flyby of Earth.

Queen guitarist and astrophysicist Sir Brian, 76, aided the mission by helping to identify where Osiris-Rex could grab a sample from the asteroid.

We’re sure there’s a Queen lyric pun to be found in this somewhere, probably a lyric from Don’t Stop Me Now…

In a message of support shown on Nasa TV, Sir Brian said: ‘Hello, Nasa folks, space fans, asteroid aficionados, this is Brian May of Queen but also I’m immensely proud to be a team member of Osiris-Rex.

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‘I can’t be with you today, I wish I could, I’m rehearsing for a Queen tour, but my heart is there with you as this precious sample is recovered.

‘Happy sample return day and congratulations to all who worked so incredibly hard on this mission.’

The rocker particularly praised his ‘dear friend’ Dante Lauretta, who he created the book Bennu 3-D: Anatomy of an Asteroid with, which is a 3D atlas of the asteroid.

On his Instagram, Sir Brian also encouraged his fans to tune into Nasa TV to watch the moment the asteroid sample touched down on Earth.


He wrote: ‘Just minutes away from the Sample Return touchdown in Utah … Google OSIRIS REx and tune in !!! I’m close to the TV here in QUEEN rehearsal land … QAL is about to ride again !! Bri’.

The sample is the US space agency’s first mission to collect a sample from an asteroid and the first by any agency since 2020.

A quarter of the sample will be given to a group of more than 200 people from 38 globally distributed institutions.

This will include a team of scientists from the University of Manchester and the Natural History Museum.

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Asteroid Bennu is a 4.5-billion-year-old remnant of our early solar system and scientists believe it can help shed light on how planets formed and evolved.

Experts say the carbon-rich, near-Earth asteroid serves as a time capsule from the earliest history of the solar system.

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