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Published byMaia Ferrebee Modified over 9 years ago
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Interplanetary bodies: asteroids asteroid-- rocky object in orbit around the sun includes: Main Belt asteroid Hilda and Thule asteroid near-Earth asteroid (NEA) Trojan asteroid origin: rocky material that never accreted into a larger object; survivors of the planetary sweep-up process Interplanetary bodies: asteroids asteroid-- rocky object in orbit around the sun includes: Main Belt asteroid Hilda and Thule asteroid near-Earth asteroid (NEA) Trojan asteroid origin: rocky material that never accreted into a larger object; survivors of the planetary sweep-up process
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Asteroid orbits objectapprox. a (AU)approx. e Main Belt2.2 - 3.20 - 0.4 asteroid Hilda, Thule3.9, 4.30 - 0.2 asteroid Trojan5.2 (= Jupiter)0 - 0.2 NEA0.7 - 30.2 - 0.8 Asteroid orbits objectapprox. a (AU)approx. e Main Belt2.2 - 3.20 - 0.4 asteroid Hilda, Thule3.9, 4.30 - 0.2 asteroid Trojan5.2 (= Jupiter)0 - 0.2 NEA0.7 - 30.2 - 0.8 NEAs derived from Main Belt by perturbations
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Asteroid locations
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3.2 AU 2.2 AU Main Selected NEA orbits
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Asteroid semi-major axes Trojans Main Belt Hilda- group Thule- group Hungaria- group
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Kirkwood gaps
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Kirkwood gaps represent areas in asteroid belt relatively free of material form at locations (resonances) that experience repeated perturbations from Jupiter strong resonance locations include 1:3 & 2:5 material in gaps moved elsewhere, such as into planet-crossing orbits (e.g., NEAs)
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Asteroids: spectra & albedos
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Examples of asteroid spectral types
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Asteroid spectral types albedomain type(%)location (a)mineralogyanalogue S10-221.8-3.5 AUpyroxeneO-chondrites? + - metalachondrites? + - olivinestony irons? M10-202.3-3.2 AUmetaliron meteorites C3-72-4 AUhydratedC-chondrites silicatesmany meteors? + carboncomets? D +2-63-5 AUcarbon /none? Porganic-richcomets? silicates Asteroid spectral types albedomain type(%)location (a)mineralogyanalogue S10-221.8-3.5 AUpyroxeneO-chondrites? + - metalachondrites? + - olivinestony irons? M10-202.3-3.2 AUmetaliron meteorites C3-72-4 AUhydratedC-chondrites silicatesmany meteors? + carboncomets? D +2-63-5 AUcarbon /none? Porganic-richcomets? silicates
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Asteroids: different types in different locations
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Asteroids: examples Gaspra Ida Mathilde Vesta Eros
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Main Belt, S-type
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Main Belt, S-type member of family
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Main Belt, C-type
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Many large craters !
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NEA, possible chondrite parent body
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Eros: up close & personal The ultimate “meteorite” collecting site!
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Relative crater size- frequency diagram (“R plot”) Gaspra-- younger (recent collision?) Mathilde-- surplus of larger craters (how?)
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Asteroids: Eros geology
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Eros: the Saddle (Himeros)
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Eros: grooves & troughs
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Eros: ridges & grooves
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Eros: mass wasting
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Eros: ponds-- asteroidal sedimentary deposit
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Asteroids: Landing the NEAR spacecraft on Eros (or how to make an asteroid landing, without designing for it)
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Asteroids: Space weathering
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Space weathering-- We have clear evidence for the importance of space weathering on all asteroids seen up close. On such asteroids, space weathering makes objects redder, darker, and less crystalline. Space weathering-- We have clear evidence for the importance of space weathering on all asteroids seen up close. On such asteroids, space weathering makes objects redder, darker, and less crystalline.
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Color-exagerrated image
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Eros spectral reflectance: mineralogy 2 micron band: Fe-bearing pyroxene 0.9 -1 micron band: Fe-bearing olivine, pyroxene
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Eros: pyroxene signature Himeros Psyche
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Space weathering-- A common process on asteroids Color variations on Gaspra & Ida: “redder” color = more weathered Albedo variations on Eros: darker = more weathered Spectral variations on Eros: weaker pyroxene signature = more weathered Space weathering-- A common process on asteroids Color variations on Gaspra & Ida: “redder” color = more weathered Albedo variations on Eros: darker = more weathered Spectral variations on Eros: weaker pyroxene signature = more weathered
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Space weathering-- Has important implications for making links between asteroids and meteorites. Probably involved in “pond” formation on Eros. Implies we can make sedimentary deposits on asteroids or small-gravity objects by space weathering. (Not seen on Moon.) Space weathering-- Has important implications for making links between asteroids and meteorites. Probably involved in “pond” formation on Eros. Implies we can make sedimentary deposits on asteroids or small-gravity objects by space weathering. (Not seen on Moon.)
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Asteroids: NEAs
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NEAs: the more we look, the more we find them
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NEA asteroid 1999 JM8 diameter ~ 3.5 km a = 2.71 AU e = 0.65 i = 13.8 o q = 0.96 AU radar images
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NEA asteroid 4179 Toutatis: “contact binary” or elongated asteroid? diameter = 4.6 x 2.4 x 1.9 km a = 2.51 AU e = 0.63 i = 0.5 o q = 0.92 AU radar images
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NEA asteroid 1999 KW4: binary asteroid diameter of primary object ~ 1.2 km diameter of secondary object ~0.4 km orbital period ~ 16 hrs a = 0.64 AU e = 0.69 i = 39 o q = 0.20 AU radar images
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NEA asteroid 1950 D4 diameter ~1.1 km rot. period ~2.1 hrs a = 1.70 AU e = 0.51 i = 12.2 o q = 0.84 AU Target: Earth?
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