In January 2006, the Stardust mission will return the first samples from a
solid solar-system body since Apollo, and the first samples of contemporary
interstellar dust ever collected. Although sophisticated laboratory instruments
exist for the analysis of Stardust samples, techniques for the recovery of
particles and particle residues from aerogel collectors remain primitive. Here
we describe our recent progress in developing techniques for extracting small
volumes of aerogel, which we have called ``keystones,'' which completely
contain particle impacts but minimize the damage to the surrounding aerogel
collector. These keystones can be fixed to custom-designed micromachined
silicon fixtures (so-called ``microforklifts''). In this configuration the
samples are self-supporting, which can be advantageous in situations in which
interference from a supporting substrate is undesirable. The keystones may also
be extracted and placed onto a substrate without a fixture. We have also
demonstrated the capability of homologously crushing these unmounted keystones
for analysis techniques which demand flat samples.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, submitted to Meteoritics and Planetary Scienc