Sugars essential for life were found for the first time alongside “space gum” on an asteroid hurtling towards Earth, indicating that our universe could be teeming with life, according to new research.

The 74-ton, 1,600-foot-wide asteroid named Bennu, first discovered in 1999 and harvested for samples by NASA in 2020, contains a five-carbon sugar ribose and a six-carbon glucose — key building blocks of DNA and RNA, according to two studies published in Nature Geosciences and Nature Astronomy on Dec. 2.

An artist’s depiction of the asteroid Bennu which is contains the building blocks for RNA and DNA, according to new studies. NASA / SWNS

The discovery of ribose is particularly significant, as that molecule is needed for RNA — which operates inside DNA — a crucial factor in “the origin of

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