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Spacecraft Study of Asteroids

Spacecraft Study of Asteroids. DrBill (20361) Romanishin U. Of Oklahoma and Oklahoma City Astronomy Club. Brief Intro to Asteroids. Most orbit in main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter Some cross paths with Earth (ALWAYS Wear a helmet when outdoors!)

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Spacecraft Study of Asteroids

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  1. Spacecraft Study of Asteroids DrBill (20361) Romanishin U. Of Oklahoma and Oklahoma City Astronomy Club

  2. Brief Intro to Asteroids Most orbit in main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter Some cross paths with Earth (ALWAYS Wear a helmet when outdoors!) Range in size from pebbles to 1000 km across (about size of Texas) As of yesterday 257,455 asteroids have numbers (good orbits), another 282,913

  3. have lesser known orbits- so, over Half a Million asteroids are cataloged! We think there are ~1.5 million with diameters greater than 1 km (0.6 mile) + “billions and billions” smaller ones *But* all asteroids together have mass only ~0.0005 Mass of Earth ----------------------------------------------------- Rich dynamical structure – interactions with mighty Jupiter

  4. What do asteroids look like? • From groundbased telescope, just a dot of light, like a star , but it MOVES • We have closeup images of only a handful of asteroids from spacecraft flybys • Sometimes, pieces of asteroids hit the Earth- these are asteroids you can hold in your hand

  5. Origin and Composition Asteroids probably remains of a “failed planet” – formation stopped by gravity of forming Jupiter (?) What are they made of? Have good idea from meteorites Similar elements to stuff in Earth

  6. 1000s of meteorites in collections around world Bewildering array of detailed compositions But to simplify, meteorites are Stony or Metallic

  7. Stony meteorites have minerals that you would hear about in any intro geology course (olivines, pyroxenes etc) One difference from Earth rocks are the chondrules – BB sized bits of minerals that are OLDEST THINGS WE CAN ACCURATELY DATE Chondrules 4560 Myr old- getting to point we can say “this chondrule 10 Myr older”

  8. Another un-terrestrial feature is existence of metallic (iron/nickel) meteorites Iron a common Earth element, but PURE iron is very rare- most iron oxidized on Earth Iron meteorites show Widmanstatten pattern Effect of Slow Cooling of liquid iron

  9. Pure iron from core of Differentated body Some large asteroids must have formed quickly, melted and differentiated, but then were destroyed by collisions releasing iron meteorites Didn’t quite have time to form one big (planet sized) body before Jupiter formed and disrupted the formation process

  10. First closeup images Prior to 1991, asteroids were dots of light Lightcurves gave some info on overall shapes First asteroid closeup from Galileo, a space probe on its way to Jupiter Galileo- launch 1989 Orbited and studied Juipter and moons from 1995-2003

  11. 951 Gaspra from Galileo

  12. (243) Ida and companion Dactyl from Galileo 1993

  13. Galileo images showed: (1) cratering a very important process shaping asteroids (2) binary asteroids did exist

  14. NEAR Shoemaker (Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous) Launch 1996 Flew by 253 Mathilde in 1997 Entered orbit around 433 Eros on 14 Feb 2000 “Landed” on Eros 12 Feb 2001

  15. movie

  16. Eros regolith

  17. Eugene M. Shoemaker1928-1997 Meteor Crater Apollo SL9 He got to the Moon.

  18. Hayabusa Japanese effort to land on asteroid and return sample of surface Launch 2003 to 25143 Itokawa “minilander” robot failed Main craft “bump landed” and tried to collect surface particles Capsule returned to Earth – Landed in Australia in June 2010 November 2010 “some particles in capsule definitely from Itokawa”- Stay Tuned

  19. Rosetta • One its way to comet 67P/Churimov-Gerasimenko • Flew by 2 asteroids: 2867 Steins in 2008 21 Lutetia in 2010

  20. Comets and Asteroids visited by spacecraft Emily Lakdawalla planetarysociety.org

  21. Coming Attractions-Dawn Dawn Extended visits to 2 asteroids Launch 2007 Currently nearing Vesta (Jul 2011- Jul 2012) On to Ceres (Feb 2015- Jul 2015)

  22. 3D shapes from Lightcurves

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