Amides from the carbonaceous asteroid (162173) Ryugu: Nanoscale spectral and isotopic characterizations
L. G. Vacher, V. T. H. Phan, L. Bonal, M. Iskakova, O. Poch, P. Beck, E. Quirico, R. C. Ogliore
MAPS, Version of Record online: 25 July 2025
“C-type asteroids, such as asteroid (162173) Ryugu, may have played a key role in delivering light elements to early Earth. Nitrogen (N)-bearing molecules have been chemically identified in some Ryugu grains, and based on the faint 3.06 μm absorption band observed by the hyperspectral microscope MicrOmega, NH-bearing compounds seem to be spread at the global scale in the collection. However, the chemical forms of these NH-bearing compounds—whether organic molecules, ammonium (NH4+) salts, NH4+- or NH-organics-bearing phyllosilicates, or other forms—remain to be better understood. In this study, we report the characterization of two Ryugu particles (C0050 and C0052) using infrared spectroscopy at millimeter, micrometer, and nanometer scales, along with NanoSIMS techniques to constrain the nature and origin of NH-bearing components in the Ryugu asteroid. Our findings show that Ryugu’s C0052 particle contains rare (~1 vol%), micrometer-sized NH-rich organic compounds with peaks at 1660 cm−1 (mainly due to C=O stretching of the amide I band) and 1550 cm−1 (mainly due to N-H bending vibration mode of the amide II band), indicative of amide-related compounds. In contrast, these compounds are absent in C0050. Notably, N isotopic analysis reveals that these amides in C0052 are depleted in 15N (δ15N ≃ −200‰), confirming their indigenous origin, while carbon (C) and hydrogen (H) isotopic compositions are indistinguishable from terrestrial values within errors. The amides detected in C0052 could have formed through hydrothermal alteration from carboxylic acids and amines precursors on Ryugu’s parent planetesimal. Alternatively, they could have originated from the irradiation of 15N-depleted N-bearing ice by ultraviolet light or galactic cosmic rays, either at the surface of the asteroid in the outer Solar System or on the mantle of interstellar dust grains in the interstellar medium. Amides delivered to early Earth by primitive small bodies such as asteroid Ryugu may have contributed to the prebiotic chemistry.”































