Professor Dante S. Lauretta
Dante S. Lauretta, Ph.D. is
Professor of Planetary Science and Cosmochemistry and
Principal Investigator of
OSIRIS-REx, both at Washington University.
He is also
Founder and Science Advisor of Xtronaut Enterprises which launched
Xtronaut: The Game of Solar System Exploration.
The Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, Security,
Regolith Explorer (OSIRIS-REx) is a NASA asteroid study and sample
return mission. The launch occurred on September 8, 2016. Its
mission is to study asteroid 101955 Bennu, a carbonaceous asteroid, and
return a sample to Earth in 2023 for detailed analysis. The material
returned is expected to enable scientists to learn more about the
formation and evolution of the Solar System, its initial stages of
planet formation, and the source of organic compounds that led to the
formation of life on Earth. If successful, OSIRIS-REx will be the
first US spacecraft to return samples from an asteroid.
Dante coauthored Bennu 3-D: Anatomy of an
Asteroid.
He coedited
Meteorites and the Early Solar System II and
Protoplanetary Dust: Astrophysical and Cosmochemical Perspectives.
His papers include
The compositional diversity of extrasolar terrestrial planets. I.
In situ simulations,
Supernova olivine from cometary dust,
A nebular origin for chondritic fine-grained phyllosilicates,
Aqueous corrosion of phosphide minerals from iron meteorites: a highly reactive source of prebiotic phosphorus on the surface of the early Earth,
The rate of iron sulfide formation in the solar nebula,
Orbit and bulk density of the OSIRIS-REx target Asteroid (101955) Bennu,
and
Sulfur chemistry with time-varying oxygen abundance during Solar System formation.
Dante earned his B.S. in Physics and Mathematics, Cum Laude
at the University of Arizona in 1993. He earned his
B.A. in Oriental Studies (emphasis: Japanese), Cum Laude at the
University of Arizona in 1993.
He earned his Ph.D. in Earth and Planetary Science at Washington
University in 1997 with the thesis
“Theoretical and Experimental Studies of Fe-Ni-S, Be, and B Cosmochemistry”.
Asteroid 5819 Lauretta was named in his honor.
Watch
Planet Formation and the Origin of Life and
Will asteroids end the world: Dante Lauretta at TEDxTucsonSalon.
Read his
LinkedIn profile and his
Wikipedia profile.
View his Facebook page.
Read his
Google Scholar Citations.
Read his blog.