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Asteroid

An asteroid is a minor planet of the inner Solar System. Sizes and shapes of asteroids vary significantly, ranging from 1-meter rocks to a dwarf planet almost 1000 km in diameter; they are rocky, metallic or icy bodies with no atmosphere.

Images of visited asteroids illustrating their difference: 243 Ida with its moon Dactyl (the 1–2 km sized dot to the right), 433 Eros the first asteroid orbited and landed on (2001) and Ceres a considerably larger asteroid and dwarf planet 1,000 km across.

Of the roughly one million known asteroids[1] the greatest number are located between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, approximately 2 to 4 AU from the Sun, in the main asteroid belt. Asteroids are generally classified to be of three types: C-type, M-type, and S-type. These were named after and are generally identified with carbonaceous, metallic, and silicaceous compositions, respectively. The size of asteroids varies greatly; the largest, Ceres, is almost 1,000 km (600 mi) across and qualifies as a dwarf planet. The total mass of all the asteroids combined is only 3% that of Earth's Moon. The majority of main belt asteroids follow slightly elliptical, stable orbits, revolving in the same direction as the Earth and taking from three to six years to complete a full circuit of the Sun.[2]

Asteroids have been historically observed from Earth; the Galileo spacecraft provided the first close observation of an asteroid. Several dedicated missions to asteroids were subsequently launched by NASA and JAXA, with plans for other missions in progress. NASA's NEAR Shoemaker studied Eros, and Dawn observed Vesta and Ceres. JAXA's missions Hayabusa and Hayabusa2 studied and returned samples of Itokawa and Ryugu, respectively. OSIRIS-REx studied Bennu, collecting a sample in 2020 to be delivered back to Earth in 2023. NASA's Lucy, launched in 2021, will study eight different asteroids, one from the main belt and seven Jupiter trojans. Psyche, scheduled for launch in 2023, will study a metallic asteroid of the same name.

Near-Earth asteroids can threaten all life on the planet; an asteroid impact event resulted in the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction. Different asteroid deflection strategies have been proposed; the Double Asteroid Redirection Test spacecraft, or DART, was launched in 2021 and intentionally impacted Dimorphos in September 2022, successfully altering its orbit by crashing into it.

History of observations

Only one asteroid, 4 Vesta, which has a relatively reflective surface, is normally visible to the naked eye. When favorably positioned, 4 Vesta can be seen in dark skies. Rarely, small asteroids passing close to Earth may be visible to the naked eye for a short time.[3] As of April 2022, the Minor Planet Center had data on 1,199,224 minor planets in the inner and outer Solar System, of which about 614,690 had enough information to be given numbered designations.[4]

Discovery of Ceres

In 1772, German astronomer Johann Elert Bode, citing Johann Daniel Titius, published a numerical procession known as the Titius–Bode law (now discredited). Except for an unexplained gap between Mars and Jupiter, Bode's formula seemed to predict the orbits of the known planets.[5][6] He wrote the following explanation for the existence of a "missing planet":

This latter point seems in particular to follow from the astonishing relation which the known six planets observe in their distances from the Sun. Let the distance from the Sun to Saturn be taken as 100, then Mercury is separated by 4 such parts from the Sun. Venus is 4 + 3 = 7. The Earth 4 + 6 = 10. Mars 4 + 12 = 16. Now comes a gap in this so orderly progression. After Mars there follows a space of 4 + 24 = 28 parts, in which no planet has yet been seen. Can one believe that the Founder of the universe had left this space empty? Certainly not. From here we come to the distance of Jupiter by 4 + 48 = 52 parts, and finally to that of Saturn by 4 + 96 = 100 parts.[7]

Bode's formula predicted another planet would be found with an orbital radius near 2.8 astronomical units (AU), or 420 million km, from the Sun.[6] The Titius–Bode law got a boost with William Herschel's discovery of Uranus near the predicted distance for a planet beyond Saturn.[5] In 1800, a group headed by Franz Xaver von Zach, editor of the German astronomical journal Monatliche Correspondenz (Monthly Correspondence), sent requests to 24 experienced astronomers (whom he dubbed the "celestial police"),[6] asking that they combine their efforts and begin a methodical search for the expected planet.[6] Although they did not discover Ceres, they later found the asteroids 2 Pallas, 3 Juno and 4 Vesta.[6]

One of the astronomers selected for the search was Giuseppe Piazzi, a Catholic priest at the Academy of Palermo, Sicily. Before receiving his invitation to join the group, Piazzi discovered Ceres on 1 January 1801.[8] He was searching for "the 87th [star] of the Catalogue of the Zodiacal stars of Mr la Caille",[5] but found that "it was preceded by another".[5] Instead of a star, Piazzi had found a moving star-like object, which he first thought was a comet:[9]

The light was a little faint, and of the colour of Jupiter, but similar to many others which generally are reckoned of the eighth magnitude. Therefore I had no doubt of its being any other than a fixed star. [...] The evening of the third, my suspicion was converted into certainty, being assured it was not a fixed star. Nevertheless before I made it known, I waited till the evening of the fourth, when I had the satisfaction to see it had moved at the same rate as on the preceding days.[5]

Piazzi observed Ceres a total of 24 times, the final time on 11 February 1801, when illness interrupted his work. He announced his discovery on 24 January 1801 in letters to only two fellow astronomers, his compatriot Barnaba Oriani of Milan and Bode in Berlin.[10] He reported it as a comet but "since its movement is so slow and rather uniform, it has occurred to me several times that it might be something better than a comet".[5] In April, Piazzi sent his complete observations to Oriani, Bode, and French astronomer Jérôme Lalande. The information was published in the September 1801 issue of the Monatliche Correspondenz.[9]

By this time, the apparent position of Ceres had changed (mostly due to Earth's motion around the Sun), and was too close to the Sun's glare for other astronomers to confirm Piazzi's observations. Toward the end of the year, Ceres should have been visible again, but after such a long time it was difficult to predict its exact position. To recover Ceres, mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss, then 24 years old, developed an efficient method of orbit determination.[9] In a few weeks, he predicted the path of Ceres and sent his results to von Zach. On 31 December 1801, von Zach and fellow celestial policeman Heinrich W. M. Olbers found Ceres near the predicted position and thus recovered it.[9] At 2.8 AU from the Sun, Ceres appeared to fit the Titius–Bode law almost perfectly; however, Neptune, once discovered in 1846, was 8 AU closer than predicted, leading most astronomers to conclude that the law was a coincidence.[11] Piazzi named the newly discovered object Ceres Ferdinandea, "in honor of the patron goddess of Sicily and of King Ferdinand of Bourbon".[7]

Further search

 
Sizes of the first ten discovered asteroids, compared to the Moon

Three other asteroids (2 Pallas, 3 Juno, and 4 Vesta) were discovered by von Zach's group over the next few years, with Vesta found in 1807.[6] No new asteroids were discovered until 1845. Amateur astronomer Karl Ludwig Hencke started his searches of new asteroids in 1830, and fifteen years later, while looking for Vesta, he found the asteroid later named 5 Astraea. It was the first new asteroid discovery in 38 years. Carl Friedrich Gauss was given the honour of naming the asteroid. After this, other astronomers joined; 15 asteroids were found by the end of 1851. In 1868, when James Craig Watson discovered the 100th asteroid, the French Academy of Sciences engraved the faces of Karl Theodor Robert Luther, John Russell Hind, and Hermann Goldschmidt, the three most successful asteroid-hunters at that time, on a commemorative medallion marking the event.[12]

In 1891, Max Wolf pioneered the use of astrophotography to detect asteroids, which appeared as short streaks on long-exposure photographic plates.[12] This dramatically increased the rate of detection compared with earlier visual methods: Wolf alone discovered 248 asteroids, beginning with 323 Brucia,[13] whereas only slightly more than 300 had been discovered up to that point. It was known that there were many more, but most astronomers did not bother with them, some calling them "vermin of the skies",[14] a phrase variously attributed to Eduard Suess[15] and Edmund Weiss.[16] Even a century later, only a few thousand asteroids were identified, numbered and named.

19th and 20th centuries

 
Cumulative discoveries of just the near-Earth asteroids known by size, 1980–2022

In the past, asteroids were discovered by a four-step process. First, a region of the sky was photographed by a wide-field telescope, or astrograph. Pairs of photographs were taken, typically one hour apart. Multiple pairs could be taken over a series of days. Second, the two films or plates of the same region were viewed under a stereoscope. A body in orbit around the Sun would move slightly between the pair of films. Under the stereoscope, the image of the body would seem to float slightly above the background of stars. Third, once a moving body was identified, its location would be measured precisely using a digitizing microscope. The location would be measured relative to known star locations.[17]

These first three steps do not constitute asteroid discovery: the observer has only found an apparition, which gets a provisional designation, made up of the year of discovery, a letter representing the half-month of discovery, and finally a letter and a number indicating the discovery's sequential number (example: 1998 FJ74). The last step is sending the locations and time of observations to the Minor Planet Center, where computer programs determine whether an apparition ties together earlier apparitions into a single orbit. If so, the object receives a catalogue number and the observer of the first apparition with a calculated orbit is declared the discoverer, and granted the honor of naming the object subject to the approval of the International Astronomical Union.[18]

Naming

 
2013 EC, shown here in radar images, has a provisional designation

By 1851, the Royal Astronomical Society decided that asteroids were being discovered at such a rapid rate that a different system was needed to categorize or name asteroids. In 1852, when de Gasparis discovered the twentieth asteroid, Benjamin Valz gave it a name and a number designating its rank among asteroid discoveries, 20 Massalia. Sometimes asteroids were discovered and not seen again. So, starting in 1892, new asteroids were listed by the year and a capital letter indicating the order in which the asteroid's orbit was calculated and registered within that specific year. For example, the first two asteroids discovered in 1892 were labeled 1892A and 1892B. However, there were not enough letters in the alphabet for all of the asteroids discovered in 1893, so 1893Z was followed by 1893AA. A number of variations of these methods were tried, including designations that included year plus a Greek letter in 1914. A simple chronological numbering system was established in 1925.[12][19]

Currently all newly discovered asteroids receive a provisional designation (such as 2002 AT4) consisting of the year of discovery and an alphanumeric code indicating the half-month of discovery and the sequence within that half-month. Once an asteroid's orbit has been confirmed, it is given a number, and later may also be given a name (e.g. 433 Eros). The formal naming convention uses parentheses around the number – e.g. (433) Eros – but dropping the parentheses is quite common. Informally, it is also common to drop the number altogether, or to drop it after the first mention when a name is repeated in running text.[20] In addition, names can be proposed by the asteroid's discoverer, within guidelines established by the International Astronomical Union.[21]

Symbols

The first asteroids to be discovered were assigned iconic symbols like the ones traditionally used to designate the planets. By 1855 there were two dozen asteroid symbols, which often occurred in multiple variants.[22]

In 1851, after the fifteenth asteroid, Eunomia, had been discovered, Johann Franz Encke made a major change in the upcoming 1854 edition of the Berliner Astronomisches Jahrbuch (BAJ, Berlin Astronomical Yearbook). He introduced a disk (circle), a traditional symbol for a star, as the generic symbol for an asteroid. The circle was then numbered in order of discovery to indicate a specific asteroid. The numbered-circle convention was quickly adopted by astronomers, and the next asteroid to be discovered (16 Psyche, in 1852) was the first to be designated in that way at the time of its discovery. However, Psyche was given an iconic symbol as well, as were a few other asteroids discovered over the next few years. 20 Massalia was the first asteroid that was not assigned an iconic symbol, and no iconic symbols were created after the 1855 discovery of 37 Fides.[a][23]

Terminology

 
A composite image, to the same scale, of the asteroids imaged at high resolution prior to 2012. They are, from largest to smallest: 4 Vesta, 21 Lutetia, 253 Mathilde, 243 Ida and its moon Dactyl, 433 Eros, 951 Gaspra, 2867 Šteins, 25143 Itokawa
 
Vesta (left), with Ceres (center) and the Moon (right) shown to scale.

The first discovered asteroid, Ceres, was originally considered a new planet.[b] It was followed by the discovery of other similar bodies, which with the equipment of the time appeared to be points of light like stars, showing little or no planetary disc, though readily distinguishable from stars due to their apparent motions. This prompted the astronomer Sir William Herschel to propose the term "asteroid",[c] coined in Greek as ἀστεροειδής, or asteroeidēs, meaning 'star-like, star-shaped', and derived from the Ancient Greek ἀστήρ astēr 'star, planet'. In the early second half of the 19th century, the terms "asteroid" and "planet" (not always qualified as "minor") were still used interchangeably.[d]

Traditionally, small bodies orbiting the Sun were classified as comets, asteroids, or meteoroids, with anything smaller than one meter across being called a meteoroid. The term "asteroid" never had a formal definition,[28] with the broader term "small Solar System bodies" being preferred by the International Astronomical Union (IAU).[29] As no IAU definition exists, asteroid can be defined as "an irregularly shaped rocky body orbiting the Sun that does not qualify as a planet or a dwarf planet under the IAU definitions of those terms".[30]

When found, asteroids were seen as a class of objects distinct from comets, and there was no unified term for the two until "small Solar System body" was coined in 2006. The main difference between an asteroid and a comet is that a comet shows a coma due to sublimation of near-surface ices by solar radiation. A few objects have ended up being dual-listed because they were first classified as minor planets but later showed evidence of cometary activity. Conversely, some (perhaps all) comets are eventually depleted of their surface volatile ices and become asteroid-like. A further distinction is that comets typically have more eccentric orbits than most asteroids; "asteroids" with notably eccentric orbits are probably dormant or extinct comets.[31]

For almost two centuries, from the discovery of Ceres in 1801 until the discovery of the first centaur, 2060 Chiron in 1977, all known asteroids spent most of their time at or within the orbit of Jupiter, though a few such as 944 Hidalgo ventured far beyond Jupiter for part of their orbit. When astronomers started finding more small bodies that permanently resided further out than Jupiter, now called centaurs, they numbered them among the traditional asteroids. There was debate over whether these objects should be considered asteroids or given a new classification. Then, when the first trans-Neptunian object (other than Pluto), 15760 Albion, was discovered in 1992, and especially when large numbers of similar objects started turning up, new terms were invented to sidestep the issue: Kuiper-belt object, trans-Neptunian object, scattered-disc object, and so on. They inhabit the cold outer reaches of the Solar System where ices remain solid and comet-like bodies are not expected to exhibit much cometary activity; if centaurs or trans-Neptunian objects were to venture close to the Sun, their volatile ices would sublimate, and traditional approaches would classify them as comets and not asteroids.

The innermost of these are the Kuiper-belt objects, called "objects" partly to avoid the need to classify them as asteroids or comets.[32] They are thought to be predominantly comet-like in composition, though some may be more akin to asteroids.[33] Furthermore, most do not have the highly eccentric orbits associated with comets, and the ones so far discovered are larger than traditional comet nuclei. (The much more distant Oort cloud is hypothesized to be the main reservoir of dormant comets.) Other recent observations, such as the analysis of the cometary dust collected by the Stardust probe, are increasingly blurring the distinction between comets and asteroids,[34] suggesting "a continuum between asteroids and comets" rather than a sharp dividing line.[35]

The minor planets beyond Jupiter's orbit are sometimes also called "asteroids", especially in popular presentations.[e] However, it is becoming increasingly common for the term "asteroid" to be restricted to minor planets of the inner Solar System.[32] Therefore, this article will restrict itself for the most part to the classical asteroids: objects of the asteroid belt, Jupiter trojans, and near-Earth objects.

When the IAU introduced the class small Solar System bodies in 2006 to include most objects previously classified as minor planets and comets, they created the class of dwarf planets for the largest minor planets – those that have enough mass to have become ellipsoidal under their own gravity. According to the IAU, "the term 'minor planet' may still be used, but generally, the term 'Small Solar System Body' will be preferred."[37] Currently only the largest object in the asteroid belt, Ceres, at about 975 km (606 mi) across, has been placed in the dwarf planet category.[38][39]

Formation

Many asteroids are the shattered remnants of planetesimals, bodies within the young Sun's solar nebula that never grew large enough to become planets.[40] It is thought that planetesimals in the asteroid belt evolved much like the rest of objects in the solar nebula until Jupiter neared its current mass, at which point excitation from orbital resonances with Jupiter ejected over 99% of planetesimals in the belt. Simulations and a discontinuity in spin rate and spectral properties suggest that asteroids larger than approximately 120 km (75 mi) in diameter accreted during that early era, whereas smaller bodies are fragments from collisions between asteroids during or after the Jovian disruption.[41] Ceres and Vesta grew large enough to melt and differentiate, with heavy metallic elements sinking to the core, leaving rocky minerals in the crust.[42]

In the Nice model, many Kuiper-belt objects are captured in the outer asteroid belt, at distances greater than 2.6 AU. Most were later ejected by Jupiter, but those that remained may be the D-type asteroids, and possibly include Ceres.[43]

Distribution within the Solar System

 
A top view of asteroid group location in the inner solar system.
 
A map of planets and asteroid groups of the inner solar system. Distances from sun are to scale, object sizes are not.

Various dynamical groups of asteroids have been discovered orbiting in the inner Solar System. Their orbits are perturbed by the gravity of other bodies in the Solar System and by the Yarkovsky effect. Significant populations include:

Asteroid belt

The majority of known asteroids orbit within the asteroid belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, generally in relatively low-eccentricity (i.e. not very elongated) orbits. This belt is estimated to contain between 1.1 and 1.9 million asteroids larger than 1 km (0.6 mi) in diameter,[44] and millions of smaller ones. These asteroids may be remnants of the protoplanetary disk, and in this region the accretion of planetesimals into planets during the formative period of the Solar System was prevented by large gravitational perturbations by Jupiter.

Contrary to popular imagery, the asteroid belt is mostly empty. The asteroids are spread over such a large volume that reaching an asteroid without aiming carefully would be improbable. Nonetheless, hundreds of thousands of asteroids are currently known, and the total number ranges in the millions or more, depending on the lower size cutoff. Over 200 asteroids are known to be larger than 100 km,[45] and a survey in the infrared wavelengths has shown that the asteroid belt has between 700,000 and 1.7 million asteroids with a diameter of 1 km or more.[46] The absolute magnitudes of most of the known asteroids are between 11 and 19, with the median at about 16.[47]

The total mass of the asteroid belt is estimated to be 2.39×1021 kg, which is just 3% of the mass of the Moon; the mass of the Kuiper Belt and Scattered Disk is over 100 times as large.[48] The four largest objects, Ceres, Vesta, Pallas, and Hygiea, account for maybe 62% of the belt's total mass, with 39% accounted for by Ceres alone.

Trojans

Trojans are populations that share an orbit with a larger planet or moon, but do not collide with it because they orbit in one of the two Lagrangian points of stability, L4 and L5, which lie 60° ahead of and behind the larger body.

In the Solar System, most known trojans share the orbit of Jupiter. They are divided into the Greek camp at L4 (ahead of Jupiter) and the Trojan camp at L5 (trailing Jupiter). More than a million Jupiter trojans larger than one kilometer are thought to exist,[49] of which more than 7,000 are currently catalogued. In other planetary orbits only nine Mars trojans, 28 Neptune trojans, two Uranus trojans, and two Earth trojans, have been found to date. A temporary Venus trojan is also known. Numerical orbital dynamics stability simulations indicate that Saturn and Uranus probably do not have any primordial trojans.[50]

Near-Earth asteroids

Near-Earth asteroids, or NEAs, are asteroids that have orbits that pass close to that of Earth. Asteroids that actually cross Earth's orbital path are known as Earth-crossers. As of April 2022, a total of 28,772 near-Earth asteroids were known; 878 have a diameter of one kilometer or larger.[51]

A small number of NEAs are extinct comets that have lost their volatile surface materials, although having a faint or intermittent comet-like tail does not necessarily result in a classification as a near-Earth comet, making the boundaries somewhat fuzzy. The rest of the near-Earth asteroids are driven out of the asteroid belt by gravitational interactions with Jupiter.[52][53]

Many asteroids have natural satellites (minor-planet moons). As of October 2021, there were 85 NEAs known to have at least one moon, including three known to have two moons.[54] The asteroid 3122 Florence, one of the largest potentially hazardous asteroids with a diameter of 4.5 km (2.8 mi), has two moons measuring 100–300 m (330–980 ft) across, which were discovered by radar imaging during the asteroid's 2017 approach to Earth.[55]

Near-Earth asteroids are divided into groups based on their semi-major axis (a), perihelion distance (q), and aphelion distance (Q):[56][52]

  • The Atiras or Apoheles have orbits strictly inside Earth's orbit: an Atira asteroid's aphelion distance (Q) is smaller than Earth's perihelion distance (0.983 AU). That is, Q < 0.983 AU, which implies that the asteroid's semi-major axis is also less than 0.983 AU.[57]
  • The Atens have a semi-major axis of less than 1 AU and cross Earth's orbit. Mathematically, a < 1.0 AU and Q > 0.983 AU. (0.983 AU is Earth's perihelion distance.)
  • The Apollos have a semi-major axis of more than 1 AU and cross Earth's orbit. Mathematically, a > 1.0 AU and q < 1.017 AU. (1.017 AU is Earth's aphelion distance.)
  • The Amors have orbits strictly outside Earth's orbit: an Amor asteroid's perihelion distance (q) is greater than Earth's aphelion distance (1.017 AU). Amor asteroids are also near-earth objects so q < 1.3 AU. In summary, 1.017 AU < q < 1.3 AU. (This implies that the asteroid's semi-major axis (a) is also larger than 1.017 AU.) Some Amor asteroid orbits cross the orbit of Mars.

Martian moons

 
Phobos
 
Deimos

It is unclear whether Martian moons Phobos and Deimos are captured asteroids or were formed due to impact event on Mars.[58] Phobos and Deimos both have much in common with carbonaceous C-type asteroids, with spectra, albedo, and density very similar to those of C- or D-type asteroids.[59] Based on their similarity, one hypothesis is that both moons may be captured main-belt asteroids.[60][61] Both moons have very circular orbits which lie almost exactly in Mars's equatorial plane, and hence a capture origin requires a mechanism for circularizing the initially highly eccentric orbit, and adjusting its inclination into the equatorial plane, most probably by a combination of atmospheric drag and tidal forces,[62] although it is not clear whether sufficient time was available for this to occur for Deimos.[58] Capture also requires dissipation of energy. The current Martian atmosphere is too thin to capture a Phobos-sized object by atmospheric braking.[58] Geoffrey A. Landis has pointed out that the capture could have occurred if the original body was a binary asteroid that separated under tidal forces.[61][63]

Phobos could be a second-generation Solar System object that coalesced in orbit after Mars formed, rather than forming concurrently out of the same birth cloud as Mars.[64]

Another hypothesis is that Mars was once surrounded by many Phobos- and Deimos-sized bodies, perhaps ejected into orbit around it by a collision with a large planetesimal.[65] The high porosity of the interior of Phobos (based on the density of 1.88 g/cm3, voids are estimated to comprise 25 to 35 percent of Phobos's volume) is inconsistent with an asteroidal origin.[66] Observations of Phobos in the thermal infrared suggest a composition containing mainly phyllosilicates, which are well known from the surface of Mars. The spectra are distinct from those of all classes of chondrite meteorites, again pointing away from an asteroidal origin.[67] Both sets of findings support an origin of Phobos from material ejected by an impact on Mars that reaccreted in Martian orbit,[68] similar to the prevailing theory for the origin of Earth's moon.

Characteristics

Size distribution

 
The asteroids of the Solar System, categorized by size and number
The masses of the largest asteroids in the main belt: 1 Ceres (blue), 4 Vesta, 2 Pallas, 10 Hygiea, 704 Interamnia, 15 Eunomia and the remainder of the Main Belt (pink). The unit of mass is ×1018 kg.

Asteroids vary greatly in size, from almost 1000 km for the largest down to rocks just 1 meter across, below which an object is classified as a meteoroid.[f] The three largest are very much like miniature planets: they are roughly spherical, have at least partly differentiated interiors,[69] and are thought to be surviving protoplanets. The vast majority, however, are much smaller and are irregularly shaped; they are thought to be either battered planetesimals or fragments of larger bodies.

The dwarf planet Ceres is by far the largest asteroid, with a diameter of 940 km (580 mi). The next largest are 4 Vesta and 2 Pallas, both with diameters of just over 500 km (300 mi). Vesta is the brightest of the four main-belt asteroids that can, on occasion, be visible to the naked eye.[70] On some rare occasions, a near-Earth asteroid may briefly become visible without technical aid; see 99942 Apophis.

The mass of all the objects of the asteroid belt, lying between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, is estimated to be (2394±6)×1018 kg, ≈ 3.25% of the mass of the Moon. Of this, Ceres comprises 938×1018 kg, about 40% of the total. Adding in the next three most massive objects, Vesta (11%), Pallas (8.5%), and Hygiea (3–4%), brings this figure up to a bit over 60%, whereas the next seven most-massive asteroids bring the total up to 70%.[48] The number of asteroids increases rapidly as their individual masses decrease.

The number of asteroids decreases markedly with increasing size. Although the size distribution generally follows a power law, there are 'bumps' at about 5 km and 100 km, where more asteroids than expected from such a curve are found. Most asteroids larger than approximately 120 km in diameter are primordial (surviving from the accretion epoch), whereas most smaller asteroids are products of fragmentation of primordial asteroids. The primordial population of the main belt was probably 200 times what it is today.[71][72]

Largest asteroids

 
42 of the largest objects in the asteroid belt captured by ESO's Very Large Telescope
 
Eros, Vesta and Ceres size comparison

Three largest objects in the asteroid belt, Ceres, Vesta, and Pallas, are intact protoplanets that share many characteristics common to planets, and are atypical compared to the majority of irregularly shaped asteroids. The fourth-largest asteroid, Hygiea, appears nearly spherical although it may have an undifferentiated interior,[73] like the majority of asteroids. The four largest asteroids constitute half the mass of the asteroid belt.

Ceres is the only asteroid that appears to have a plastic shape under its own gravity and hence the only one that is a dwarf planet.[74] It has a much higher absolute magnitude than the other asteroids, of around 3.32,[75] and may possess a surface layer of ice.[76] Like the planets, Ceres is differentiated: it has a crust, a mantle and a core.[76] No meteorites from Ceres have been found on Earth.[77]

Vesta, too, has a differentiated interior, though it formed inside the Solar System's frost line, and so is devoid of water;[78][79] its composition is mainly of basaltic rock with minerals such as olivine.[80] Aside from the large crater at its southern pole, Rheasilvia, Vesta also has an ellipsoidal shape. Vesta is the parent body of the Vestian family and other V-type asteroids, and is the source of the HED meteorites, which constitute 5% of all meteorites on Earth.

Pallas is unusual in that, like Uranus, it rotates on its side, with its axis of rotation tilted at high angles to its orbital plane.[81] Its composition is similar to that of Ceres: high in carbon and silicon, and perhaps partially differentiated.[82] Pallas is the parent body of the Palladian family of asteroids.

Hygiea is the largest carbonaceous asteroid[83] and, unlike the other largest asteroids, lies relatively close to the plane of the ecliptic. It is the largest member and presumed parent body of the Hygiean family of asteroids. Because there is no sufficiently large crater on the surface to be the source of that family, as there is on Vesta, it is thought that Hygiea may have been completely disrupted in the collision that formed the Hygiean family and recoalesced after losing a bit less than 2% of its mass. Observations taken with the Very Large Telescope's SPHERE imager in 2017 and 2018, revealed that Hygiea has a nearly spherical shape, which is consistent both with it being in hydrostatic equilibrium, or formerly being in hydrostatic equilibrium, or with being disrupted and recoalescing.[84][85]

Internal differentiation of large asteroids is possibly related to their lack of natural satellites, as satellites of main belt asteroids are mostly believed to form from collisional disruption, creating a rubble pile structure.[77]

Attributes of largest asteroids
Name Orbital
radius
(AU)
Orbital
period

(years)
Inclination
to ecliptic
Orbital
eccentricity
Diameter
(km)
Diameter
(% of Moon)
Mass
(×1018 kg)
Mass
(% of Ceres)
Density
(g/cm3)
Rotation
period
(hr)
Ceres 2.77 4.60 10.6° 0.079 964×964×892
(mean 939.4)
27% 938 100% 2.16±0.01 9.07
Vesta 2.36 3.63 7.1° 0.089 573×557×446
(mean 525.4)
15% 259 28% 3.46 ± 0.04 5.34
Pallas 2.77 4.62 34.8° 0.231 550×516×476
(mean 511±4)
15% 204±3 21% 2.92±0.08 7.81
Hygiea 3.14 5.56 3.8° 0.117 450×430×424
(mean 433±8)
12% 87±7 9% 2.06±0.20 13.8

Rotation

Measurements of the rotation rates of large asteroids in the asteroid belt show that there is an upper limit. Very few asteroids with a diameter larger than 100 meters have a rotation period less than 2.2 hours.[86] For asteroids rotating faster than approximately this rate, the inertial force at the surface is greater than the gravitational force, so any loose surface material would be flung out. However, a solid object should be able to rotate much more rapidly. This suggests that most asteroids with a diameter over 100 meters are rubble piles formed through the accumulation of debris after collisions between asteroids.[87]

Color

Asteroids become darker and redder with age due to space weathering.[88] However evidence suggests most of the color change occurs rapidly, in the first hundred thousand years, limiting the usefulness of spectral measurement for determining the age of asteroids.[89]

Surface features

 
Cratered terrain on 4 Vesta

Except for the "big four" (Ceres, Pallas, Vesta, and Hygiea), asteroids are likely to be broadly similar in appearance, if irregular in shape. 50 km (31 mi) 253 Mathilde is a rubble pile saturated with craters with diameters the size of the asteroid's radius. Earth-based observations of 300 km (186 mi) 511 Davida, one of the largest asteroids after the big four, reveal a similarly angular profile, suggesting it is also saturated with radius-size craters.[90] Medium-sized asteroids such as Mathilde and 243 Ida, that have been observed up close, also reveal a deep regolith covering the surface. Of the big four, Pallas and Hygiea are practically unknown. Vesta has compression fractures encircling a radius-size crater at its south pole but is otherwise a spheroid.

Dawn spacecraft revealed that Ceres has a heavily cratered surface, but with fewer large craters than expected.[91] Models based on the formation of the current asteroid belt had suggested Ceres should possess 10 to 15 craters larger than 400 km (250 mi) in diameter.[91] The largest confirmed crater on Ceres, Kerwan Basin, is 284 km (176 mi) across.[92] The most likely reason for this is viscous relaxation of the crust slowly flattening out larger impacts.[91]

Composition

Asteroids are classified by their characteristic emission spectra, with the majority falling into three main groups: C-type, M-type, and S-type. These were named after and are generally identified with carbonaceous (carbon-rich), metallic, and silicaceous (stony) compositions, respectively. The physical composition of asteroids is varied and in most cases poorly understood. Ceres appears to be composed of a rocky core covered by an icy mantle, where Vesta is thought to have a nickel-iron core, olivine mantle, and basaltic crust.[93] Thought to be the largest undifferentiated asteroid, 10 Hygiea seems to have a uniformly primitive composition of carbonaceous chondrite, but it may actually be a differentiated asteroid that was globally disrupted by an impact and then reassembled. Other asteroids appear to be the remnant cores or mantles of proto-planets, high in rock and metal. Most small asteroids are believed to be piles of rubble held together loosely by gravity, although the largest are probably solid. Some asteroids have moons or are co-orbiting binaries: rubble piles, moons, binaries, and scattered asteroid families are thought to be the results of collisions that disrupted a parent asteroid, or possibly a planet.[94]

In the main asteroid belt, there appear to be two primary populations of asteroid: a dark, volatile-rich population, consisting of the C-type and P-type asteroids, with albedos less that 0.10 and densities under 2.2 g/cm3, and a dense, volatile-poor population, consisting of the S-type and M-type asteroids, with albedos over 0.15 and densities greater than 2.7. Within these populations, larger asteroids are denser, presumably due to compression. There appears to be minimal macro-porosity (interstitial vacuum) in the score of asteroids with masses greater than 10×1018 kg.[95]

Composition is calculated from three primary sources: albedo, surface spectrum, and density. The last can only be determined accurately by observing the orbits of moons the asteroid might have. So far, every asteroid with moons has turned out to be a rubble pile, a loose conglomeration of rock and metal that may be half empty space by volume. The investigated asteroids are as large as 280 km in diameter, and include 121 Hermione (268×186×183 km), and 87 Sylvia (384×262×232 km). Few asteroids are larger than 87 Sylvia, none of them have moons. The fact that such large asteroids as Sylvia may be rubble piles, presumably due to disruptive impacts, has important consequences for the formation of the Solar System: computer simulations of collisions involving solid bodies show them destroying each other as often as merging, but colliding rubble piles are more likely to merge. This means that the cores of the planets could have formed relatively quickly.[96]

Water

Scientists hypothesize that some of the first water brought to Earth was delivered by asteroid impacts after the collision that produced the Moon.[97] In 2009, the presence of water ice was confirmed on the surface of 24 Themis using NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility. The surface of the asteroid appears completely covered in ice. As this ice layer is sublimating, it may be getting replenished by a reservoir of ice under the surface. Organic compounds were also detected on the surface.[98][99][97][100] The presence of ice on 24 Themis makes the initial theory plausible.[97]

In October 2013, water was detected on an extrasolar body for the first time, on an asteroid orbiting the white dwarf GD 61.[101] On 22 January 2014, European Space Agency (ESA) scientists reported the detection, for the first definitive time, of water vapor on Ceres, the largest object in the asteroid belt.[102] The detection was made by using the far-infrared abilities of the Herschel Space Observatory.[103] The finding is unexpected because comets, not asteroids, are typically considered to "sprout jets and plumes". According to one of the scientists, "The lines are becoming more and more blurred between comets and asteroids."[103]

Findings have shown that solar winds can react with the oxygen in the upper layer of the asteroids and create water. It has been estimated that "every cubic metre of irradiated rock could contain up to 20 litres"; study was conducted using an atom probe tomography, numbers are given for the Itokawa S-type asteroid.[104][105]

Acfer 049, a meteorite discovered in Algeria in 1990, was shown in 2019 to have an ultraporous lithology (UPL): porous texture that could be formed by removal of ice that filled these pores, this suggests that UPL "represent fossils of primordial ice".[106]

Organic compounds

Asteroids contain traces of amino acids and other organic compounds, and some speculate that asteroid impacts may have seeded the early Earth with the chemicals necessary to initiate life, or may have even brought life itself to Earth (an event called "panspermia").[107][108] In August 2011, a report, based on NASA studies with meteorites found on Earth, was published suggesting DNA and RNA components (adenine, guanine and related organic molecules) may have been formed on asteroids and comets in outer space.[109][110][111]

In November 2019, scientists reported detecting, for the first time, sugar molecules, including ribose, in meteorites, suggesting that chemical processes on asteroids can produce some fundamentally essential bio-ingredients important to life, and supporting the notion of an RNA world prior to a DNA-based origin of life on Earth, and possibly, as well, the notion of panspermia.[112][113][114]

Classification

Asteroids are commonly categorized according to two criteria: the characteristics of their orbits, and features of their reflectance spectrum.

Orbital classification

 
A complex horseshoe orbit (the vertical looping is due to inclination of the smaller body's orbit to that of the Earth, and would be absent if both orbited in the same plane)  Sun ·   Earth ·   (419624) 2010 SO16

Many asteroids have been placed in groups and families based on their orbital characteristics. Apart from the broadest divisions, it is customary to name a group of asteroids after the first member of that group to be discovered. Groups are relatively loose dynamical associations, whereas families are tighter and result from the catastrophic break-up of a large parent asteroid sometime in the past.[115] Families are more common and easier to identify within the main asteroid belt, but several small families have been reported among the Jupiter trojans.[116] Main belt families were first recognized by Kiyotsugu Hirayama in 1918 and are often called Hirayama families in his honor.

About 30–35% of the bodies in the asteroid belt belong to dynamical families, each thought to have a common origin in a past collision between asteroids. A family has also been associated with the plutoid dwarf planet Haumea.

Some asteroids have unusual horseshoe orbits that are co-orbital with Earth or another planet. Examples are 3753 Cruithne and 2002 AA29. The first instance of this type of orbital arrangement was discovered between Saturn's moons Epimetheus and Janus. Sometimes these horseshoe objects temporarily become quasi-satellites for a few decades or a few hundred years, before returning to their earlier status. Both Earth and Venus are known to have quasi-satellites.

Such objects, if associated with Earth or Venus or even hypothetically Mercury, are a special class of Aten asteroids. However, such objects could be associated with the outer planets as well.

Spectral classification

In 1975, an asteroid taxonomic system based on color, albedo, and spectral shape was developed by Chapman, Morrison, and Zellner.[117] These properties are thought to correspond to the composition of the asteroid's surface material. The original classification system had three categories: C-types for dark carbonaceous objects (75% of known asteroids), S-types for stony (silicaceous) objects (17% of known asteroids) and U for those that did not fit into either C or S. This classification has since been expanded to include many other asteroid types. The number of types continues to grow as more asteroids are studied.

The two most widely used taxonomies now used are the Tholen classification and SMASS classification. The former was proposed in 1984 by David J. Tholen, and was based on data collected from an eight-color asteroid survey performed in the 1980s. This resulted in 14 asteroid categories.[118] In 2002, the Small Main-Belt Asteroid Spectroscopic Survey resulted in a modified version of the Tholen taxonomy with 24 different types. Both systems have three broad categories of C, S, and X asteroids, where X consists of mostly metallic asteroids, such as the M-type. There are also several smaller classes.[119]

The proportion of known asteroids falling into the various spectral types does not necessarily reflect the proportion of all asteroids that are of that type; some types are easier to detect than others, biasing the totals.

Problems

Originally, spectral designations were based on inferences of an asteroid's composition.[120] However, the correspondence between spectral class and composition is not always very good, and a variety of classifications are in use. This has led to significant confusion. Although asteroids of different spectral classifications are likely to be composed of different materials, there are no assurances that asteroids within the same taxonomic class are composed of the same (or similar) materials.

Active asteroids

 
Asteroid (101955) Bennu seen ejecting particles by the OSIRIS-REx

Active asteroids are objects that have asteroid-like orbits but show comet-like visual characteristics. That is, they show comae, tails, or other visual evidence of mass-loss (like a comet), but their orbit remains within Jupiter's orbit (like an asteroid).[121][122] These bodies were originally designated main-belt comets (MBCs) in 2006 by astronomers David Jewitt and Henry Hsieh, but this name implies they are necessarily icy in composition like a comet and that they only exist within the main-belt, whereas the growing population of active asteroids shows that this is not always the case.[121][123][124]

The first active asteroid discovered is 7968 Elst–Pizarro. It was discovered (as an asteroid) in 1979 but then was found to have a tail by Eric Elst and Guido Pizarro in 1996 and given the cometary designation 133P/Elst-Pizarro.[121][125] Another notable object is 311P/PanSTARRS: observations made by the Hubble Space Telescope revealed that it had six comet-like tails.[126] The tails are suspected to be streams of material ejected by the asteroid as a result of a rubble pile asteroid spinning fast enough to remove material from it.[127]

Exploration

Until the age of space travel, objects in the asteroid belt could only be observed with large telescopes, their shapes and terrain remaining a mystery. The best modern ground-based telescopes and the Earth-orbiting Hubble Space Telescope can only resolve a small amount of detail on the surfaces of the largest asteroids. Limited information about the shapes and compositions of asteroids can be inferred from their light curves (variation in brightness during rotation) and their spectral properties. Sizes can be estimated by timing the lengths of star occultations (when an asteroid passes directly in front of a star). Radar imaging can yield good information about asteroid shapes and orbital and rotational parameters, especially for near-Earth asteroids. Spacecraft flybys can provide much more data than any ground or space-based observations; sample-return missions gives insights about regolith composition.

Ground-based observations

 
The 70m antenna at Goldstone Observatory
 
Radar observations of near-Earth asteroid (505657) 2014 SR339 as seen by Arecibo

As asteroids are rather small and faint objects, the data that can be obtained from ground-based observations (GBO) are limited. By means of ground-based optical telescopes the visual magnitude can be obtained; when converted into the absolute magnitude it gives a rough estimate of the asteroid's size. Light-curve measurements can also be made by GBO; when collected over a long period of time it allows an estimate of the rotational period, the pole orientation (sometimes), and a rough estimate of the asteroid's shape. Spectral data (both visible-light and near-infrared spectroscopy) gives information about the object's composition, used to classify the observed asteroids. Such observations are limited as they provide information about only the thin layer on the surface (up to several micrometers).[128] As planetologist Patrick Michel writes:

Mid- to thermal-infrared observations, along with polarimetry measurements, are probably the only data that give some indication of actual physical properties. Measuring the heat flux of an asteroid at a single wavelength gives an estimate of the dimensions of the object; these measurements have lower uncertainty than measurements of the reflected sunlight in the visible-light spectral region. If the two measurements can be combined, both the effective diameter and the geometric albedo—the latter being a measure of the brightness at zero phase angle, that is, when illumination comes from directly behind the observer—can be derived. In addition, thermal measurements at two or more wavelengths, plus the brightness in the visible-light region, give information on the thermal properties. The thermal inertia, which is a measure of how fast a material heats up or cools off, of most observed asteroids is lower than the bare-rock reference value but greater than that of the lunar regolith; this observation indicates the presence of an insulating layer of granular material on their surface. Moreover, there seems to be a trend, perhaps related to the gravitational environment, that smaller objects (with lower gravity) have a small regolith layer consisting of coarse grains, while larger objects have a thicker regolith layer consisting of fine grains. However, the detailed properties of this regolith layer are poorly known from remote observations. Moreover, the relation between thermal inertia and surface roughness is not straightforward, so one needs to interpret the thermal inertia with caution.[128]

Near-Earth asteroids that come into close vicinity of the planet can be studied in more details with radar; it provides information about the surface of the asteroid (for example can show the presence of craters and boulders). Such observations were conducted by the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico (305 meter dish) and Goldstone Observatory in California (70 meter dish). Radar observations can also be used for accurate determination of the orbital and rotational dynamics of observed objects.[128]

Space-based observations

 
WISE infrared space telescope
 
Asteroid 6481 Tenzing, center, is seen moving against a background of stars in this series of images taken by the James Webb Space Telescope's instrument NIRCam

Both space and ground-based observatories conducted asteroid search programs; the space-based searches are expected to detect more objects because there is no atmosphere to interfere and because they can observe larger portions of the sky. NEOWISE observed more than 100,000 asteroids of the main belt, Spitzer Space Telescope observed more than 700 near-Earth asteroids. These observations determined rough sizes of the majority of observed objects, but provided limited detail about surface properties (such as regolith depth and composition, angle of repose, cohesion, and porosity).[128]

Asteroids were also studied by the Hubble Space Telescope, such as tracking the colliding asteroids in the main belt,[129][130] break-up of an asteroid,[131] observing an active asteroid with six comet-like tails,[132] and observing asteroids that were chosen as targets of dedicated missions.[133][134]

Space probe missions

According to Patrick Michel,

The internal structure of asteroids is inferred only from indirect evidence: bulk densities measured by spacecraft, the orbits of natural satellites in the case of asteroid binaries, and the drift of an asteroid's orbit due to the Yarkovsky thermal effect. A spacecraft near an asteroid is perturbed enough by the asteroid's gravity to allow an estimate of the asteroid's mass. The volume is then estimated using a model of the asteroid's shape. Mass and volume allow the derivation of the bulk density, whose uncertainty is usually dominated by the errors made on the volume estimate. The internal porosity of asteroids can be inferred by comparing their bulk density with that of their assumed meteorite analogues, dark asteroids seem to be more porous (>40%) than bright ones. The nature of this porosity is unclear.[128]

Dedicated missions

The first asteroid to be photographed in close-up was 951 Gaspra in 1991, followed in 1993 by 243 Ida and its moon Dactyl, all of which were imaged by the Galileo probe en route to Jupiter. Other asteroids briefly visited by spacecraft en route to other destinations include 9969 Braille (by Deep Space 1 in 1999), 5535 Annefrank (by Stardust in 2002), 2867 Šteins and 21 Lutetia (by the Rosetta probe in 2008), and 4179 Toutatis (China's lunar orbiter Chang'e 2, which flew within 3.2 km (2 mi) in 2012).

The first dedicated asteroid probe was NASA's NEAR Shoemaker, which photographed 253 Mathilde in 1997, before entering into orbit around 433 Eros, finally landing on its surface in 2001. It was the first spacecraft to successfully orbit and land on an asteroid.[135] From September to November 2005, the Japanese Hayabusa probe studied 25143 Itokawa in detail and returned samples of its surface to Earth on 13 June 2010, the first asteroid sample-return mission. In 2007, NASA launched the Dawn spacecraft, which orbited 4 Vesta for a year, and observed the dwarf planet Ceres for three years.

Hayabusa2, a probe launched by JAXA 2014, orbited its target asteroid 162173 Ryugu for more than a year and took samples that were delivered to Earth in 2020. The spacecraft is now on an extended mission and expected to arrive at a new target in 2031.

NASA launched the OSIRIS-REx in 2016, a sample return mission to asteroid 101955 Bennu. In 2021, the probe departed the asteroid with a sample from its surface. Sample delivery to Earth is expected on September 24, 2023.[136] The spacecraft will continue on an extended mission, designated OSIRIS-APEX, to explore near-Earth asteroid Apophis in 2029.

In 2021, NASA launched Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART), a mission to test technology for defending Earth against potential hazardous objects. DART deliberately crashed into the minor-planet moon Dimorphos of the double asteroid Didymos in September 2022 to assess the potential of a spacecraft impact to deflect an asteroid from a collision course with Earth.[137] In October, NASA declared DART a success, confirming it had shortened Dimorphos' orbital period around Didymos by about 32 minutes.[138]

Planned missions

 
Asteroids and comets visited by spacecraft as of 2019 (except Ceres and Vesta), to scale

Currently, several asteroid-dedicated missions are planned by NASA, JAXA, ESA, and CNSA.

NASA's Lucy, launched in 2021, would visit eight asteroids, one from the main belt and seven Jupiter trojans; it is the first mission to trojans. The main mission would start in 2027.[139][140]

ESA's Hera, planned for launch in 2024, will study the results of the DART impact. It will measure the size and morphology of the crater, and momentum transmitted by the impact, to determine the efficiency of the deflection produced by DART.

NASA's Psyche would be launched in 2023 or 2024 to study the large metallic asteroid of the same name.

JAXA's DESTINY+ is a mission for a flyby of the Geminids meteor shower parent body 3200 Phaethon, as well as various minor bodies. Its launch is planned for 2024.[141]

CNSA's Tianwen-2 is planned to launch in 2025.[142] It will use solar electric propulsion to explore the co-orbital near-Earth asteroid 469219 Kamoʻoalewa and the active asteroid 311P/PanSTARRS. The spacecraft will collect samples of the regolith of Kamo'oalewa.[143]

Asteroid mining

 
Artist's concept of a crewed mission to an asteroid

The concept of asteroid mining was proposed in 1970s. Matt Anderson defines successful asteroid mining as "the development of a mining program that is both financially self-sustaining and profitable to its investors".[144] It has been suggested that asteroids might be used as a source of materials that may be rare or exhausted on Earth,[145] or materials for constructing space habitats. Materials that are heavy and expensive to launch from Earth may someday be mined from asteroids and used for space manufacturing and construction.[146][147]

As resource depletion on Earth becomes more real, the idea of extracting valuable elements from asteroids and returning these to Earth for profit, or using space-based resources to build solar-power satellites and space habitats,[148][149] becomes more attractive. Hypothetically, water processed from ice could refuel orbiting propellant depots.[150][151]

From the astrobiological perspective, asteroid prospecting could provide scientific data for the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI). Some astrophysicists have suggested that if advanced extraterrestrial civilizations employed asteroid mining long ago, the hallmarks of these activities might be detectable.[152][153][154]

Mining Ceres is also considered a possibility. As the largest body in the asteroid belt, Ceres could become the main base and transport hub for future asteroid mining infrastructure,[155] allowing mineral resources to be transported to Mars, the Moon, and Earth. Because of its small escape velocity combined with large amounts of water ice, it also could serve as a source of water, fuel, and oxygen for ships going through and beyond the asteroid belt.[155] Transportation from Mars or the Moon to Ceres would be even more energy-efficient than transportation from Earth to the Moon.[156]

Threats to Earth

 
Frequency of bolides, small asteroids roughly 1 to 20 meters in diameter impacting Earth's atmosphere

There is increasing interest in identifying asteroids whose orbits cross Earth's, and that could, given enough time, collide with Earth. The three most important groups of near-Earth asteroids are the Apollos, Amors, and Atens.

The near-Earth asteroid 433 Eros had been discovered as long ago as 1898, and the 1930s brought a flurry of similar objects. In order of discovery, these were: 1221 Amor, 1862 Apollo, 2101 Adonis, and finally 69230 Hermes, which approached within 0.005 AU of Earth in 1937. Astronomers began to realize the possibilities of Earth impact.

Two events in later decades increased the alarm: the increasing acceptance of the Alvarez hypothesis that an impact event resulted in the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction, and the 1994 observation of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 crashing into Jupiter. The U.S. military also declassified the information that its military satellites, built to detect nuclear explosions, had detected hundreds of upper-atmosphere impacts by objects ranging from one to ten meters across.

All of these considerations helped spur the launch of highly efficient surveys, consisting of charge-coupled device (CCD) cameras and computers directly connected to telescopes. As of 2011, it was estimated that 89% to 96% of near-Earth asteroids one kilometer or larger in diameter had been discovered.[51] A list of teams using such systems includes:[157][158]

As of 29 October 2018, the LINEAR system alone had discovered 147,132 asteroids.[159] Among the surveys, 19,266 near-Earth asteroids have been discovered[160] including almost 900 more than 1 km (0.6 mi) in diameter.[161]

In April 2018, the B612 Foundation reported "It is 100 percent certain we'll be hit [by a devastating asteroid], but we're not 100 percent sure when."[162] In June 2018, the US National Science and Technology Council warned that America is unprepared for an asteroid impact event, and has developed and released the "National Near-Earth Object Preparedness Strategy Action Plan" to better prepare.[163][164][165] According to expert testimony in the United States Congress in 2013, NASA would require at least five years of preparation before a mission to intercept an asteroid could be launched.[166]

The United Nations declared 30 June as International Asteroid Day to educate the public about asteroids. The date of International Asteroid Day commemorates the anniversary of the Tunguska asteroid impact over Siberia, on 30 June 1908.[167][168]

Chicxulub impact

 
Artist's impression of an asteroid impact on Earth

The Chicxulub crater is an impact crater buried underneath the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico. Its center is offshore near the communities of Chicxulub Puerto and Chicxulub Pueblo, after which the crater is named. It was formed when a large asteroid, about 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) in diameter, struck the Earth. The crater is estimated to be 180 kilometers (110 miles) in diameter and 20 kilometers (12 miles) in depth. It is one of the largest confirmed impact structures on Earth, and the only one whose peak ring is intact and directly accessible for scientific research.

In the late 1970s, geologist Walter Alvarez and his father, Nobel Prize–winning scientist Luis Walter Alvarez, put forth their theory that the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction was caused by an impact event.[169] The main evidence of such an impact was contained in a thin layer of clay present in the K–Pg boundary in Gubbio, Italy. The Alvarezes and colleagues reported that it contained an abnormally high concentration of iridium, a chemical element rare on earth but common in asteroids.[170][171] Iridium levels in this layer were as much as 160 times above the background level.[172] It was hypothesized that the iridium was spread into the atmosphere when the impactor was vaporized and settled across the Earth's surface among other material thrown up by the impact, producing the layer of iridium-enriched clay.[173] At the time, consensus was not settled on what caused the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction and the boundary layer, with theories including a nearby supernova, climate change, or a geomagnetic reversal.[172]: 1095  The Alvarezes' impact hypothesis was rejected by many paleontologists, who believed that the lack of fossils found close to the K–Pg boundary—the "three-meter problem"—suggested a more gradual die-off of fossil species.[169][174]

There is broad consensus that the Chicxulub impactor was an asteroid with a carbonaceous chondrite composition, rather than a comet.[175] The impactor was around 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) in diameter[175]—large enough that, if set at sea level, it would have reached taller than Mount Everest.[174]: 9 

Asteroid deflection strategies

 
Artist's concept of spacious structure of near-Earth asteroid 2011 MD[176]

Various collision avoidance techniques have different trade-offs with respect to metrics such as overall performance, cost, failure risks, operations, and technology readiness.[177] There are various methods for changing the course of an asteroid/comet.[178] These can be differentiated by various types of attributes such as the type of mitigation (deflection or fragmentation), energy source (kinetic, electromagnetic, gravitational, solar/thermal, or nuclear), and approach strategy (interception,[179][180] rendezvous, or remote station).

Strategies fall into two basic sets: fragmentation and delay.[178][181] Fragmentation concentrates on rendering the impactor harmless by fragmenting it and scattering the fragments so that they miss the Earth or are small enough to burn up in the atmosphere. Delay exploits the fact that both the Earth and the impactor are in orbit. An impact occurs when both reach the same point in space at the same time, or more correctly when some point on Earth's surface intersects the impactor's orbit when the impactor arrives. Since the Earth is approximately 12,750 km in diameter and moves at approx. 30 km per second in its orbit, it travels a distance of one planetary diameter in about 425 seconds, or slightly over seven minutes. Delaying, or advancing the impactor's arrival by times of this magnitude can, depending on the exact geometry of the impact, cause it to miss the Earth.[182]

"Project Icarus" was one of the first projects designed in 1967 as a contingency plan in case of collision with 1566 Icarus. The plan relied on the new Saturn V rocket, which did not make its first flight until after the report had been completed. Six Saturn V rockets would be used, each launched at variable intervals from months to hours away from impact. Each rocket was to be fitted with a single 100-megaton nuclear warhead as well as a modified Apollo Service Module and uncrewed Apollo Command Module for guidance to the target. The warheads would be detonated 30 meters from the surface, deflecting or partially destroying the asteroid. Depending on the subsequent impacts on the course or the destruction of the asteroid, later missions would be modified or cancelled as needed. The "last-ditch" launch of the sixth rocket would be 18 hours prior to impact.[183]

Fiction

Asteroids and the asteroid belt are a staple of science fiction stories. Asteroids play several potential roles in science fiction: as places human beings might colonize, resources for extracting minerals, hazards encountered by spacecraft traveling between two other points, and as a threat to life on Earth or other inhabited planets, dwarf planets, and natural satellites by potential impact.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Except for Pluto and, in the astrological community, for a few outer bodies such as 2060 Chiron.
  2. ^ Ceres is the largest asteroid and now classified as a dwarf planet. All other asteroids are now classified as small Solar System bodies along with comets, centaurs, and the smaller trans-Neptunian objects.
  3. ^ In an oral presentation,[24] Clifford Cunningham presented his finding that the word was coined by Charles Burney, Jr., the son of a friend of Herschel.[25][26]
  4. ^ For example, the Annual of Scientific Discovery: "Professor J. Watson has been awarded by the Paris Academy of Sciences, the astronomical prize, Lalande foundation, for the discovery of eight new asteroids in one year. The planet Lydia (No. 110), discovered by M. Borelly at the Marseilles Observatory [...] M. Borelly had previously discovered two planets bearing the numbers 91 and 99 in the system of asteroids revolving between Mars and Jupiter".[27]
    The Universal English Dictionary (John Craig, 1869) lists the asteroids (and gives their pronunciations) up to 64 Angelina, along with the definition "one of the recently-discovered planets." At this time it was common to anglicize the spellings of the names, e.g. "Aglaia" for 47 Aglaja and "Atalanta" for 36 Atalante.
  5. ^ For instance, a joint NASAJPL public-outreach website states:

    We include Trojans (bodies captured in Jupiter's 4th and 5th Lagrange points), Centaurs (bodies in orbit between Jupiter and Neptune), and trans-Neptunian objects (orbiting beyond Neptune) in our definition of "asteroid" as used on this site, even though they may more correctly be called "minor planets" instead of asteroids.[36]

  6. ^ The definition in the 1995 paper (Beech and Steel) has been updated by a 2010 paper (Rubin and Grossman) and the discovery of 1 meter asteroids.

References

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  3. ^ Britt, Robert Roy (4 February 2005). "Closest flyby of large asteroid to be naked-eye visible". Space.com.
  4. ^ "Latest Published Data". Minor Planet Center. International Astronomical Union. Retrieved 3 April 2022.
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  6. ^ a b c d e f Hogg, Helen Sawyer (1948). "The Titius-Bode Law and the Discovery of Ceres". Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. 242: 241–246. Bibcode:1948JRASC..42..241S. from the original on 18 July 2021. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
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  8. ^ Landau, Elizabeth (26 January 2016). "Ceres: Keeping Well-Guarded Secrets for 215 Years". NASA. from the original on 24 May 2019. Retrieved 26 January 2016.
  9. ^ a b c d Forbes, Eric G. (1971). "Gauss and the Discovery of Ceres". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 2 (3): 195–199. Bibcode:1971JHA.....2..195F. doi:10.1177/002182867100200305. S2CID 125888612. from the original on 18 July 2021. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
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Further reading

External links

  • "Alphabetical list of minor planet names". Minor Planet Center. International Astronomical Union.
  • "Asteroid articles in Planetary Science Research Discoveries". Planetary Science. University of Hawaii.
  • "JPL Asteroid Watch site". Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
  • "NASA Asteroid and Comet Watch site". 21 January 2015.
  • Asteroid size comparisons (video; 2:40) on YouTube

asteroid, other, uses, disambiguation, asteroid, minor, planet, inner, solar, system, sizes, shapes, asteroids, vary, significantly, ranging, from, meter, rocks, dwarf, planet, almost, 1000, diameter, they, rocky, metallic, bodies, with, atmosphere, images, vi. For other uses see Asteroid disambiguation An asteroid is a minor planet of the inner Solar System Sizes and shapes of asteroids vary significantly ranging from 1 meter rocks to a dwarf planet almost 1000 km in diameter they are rocky metallic or icy bodies with no atmosphere Images of visited asteroids illustrating their difference 243 Ida with its moon Dactyl the 1 2 km sized dot to the right 433 Eros the first asteroid orbited and landed on 2001 and Ceres a considerably larger asteroid and dwarf planet 1 000 km across Of the roughly one million known asteroids 1 the greatest number are located between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter approximately 2 to 4 AU from the Sun in the main asteroid belt Asteroids are generally classified to be of three types C type M type and S type These were named after and are generally identified with carbonaceous metallic and silicaceous compositions respectively The size of asteroids varies greatly the largest Ceres is almost 1 000 km 600 mi across and qualifies as a dwarf planet The total mass of all the asteroids combined is only 3 that of Earth s Moon The majority of main belt asteroids follow slightly elliptical stable orbits revolving in the same direction as the Earth and taking from three to six years to complete a full circuit of the Sun 2 Asteroids have been historically observed from Earth the Galileo spacecraft provided the first close observation of an asteroid Several dedicated missions to asteroids were subsequently launched by NASA and JAXA with plans for other missions in progress NASA s NEAR Shoemaker studied Eros and Dawn observed Vesta and Ceres JAXA s missions Hayabusa and Hayabusa2 studied and returned samples of Itokawa and Ryugu respectively OSIRIS REx studied Bennu collecting a sample in 2020 to be delivered back to Earth in 2023 NASA s Lucy launched in 2021 will study eight different asteroids one from the main belt and seven Jupiter trojans Psyche scheduled for launch in 2023 will study a metallic asteroid of the same name Near Earth asteroids can threaten all life on the planet an asteroid impact event resulted in the Cretaceous Paleogene extinction Different asteroid deflection strategies have been proposed the Double Asteroid Redirection Test spacecraft or DART was launched in 2021 and intentionally impacted Dimorphos in September 2022 successfully altering its orbit by crashing into it Contents 1 History of observations 1 1 Discovery of Ceres 1 2 Further search 1 3 19th and 20th centuries 2 Naming 2 1 Symbols 3 Terminology 4 Formation 5 Distribution within the Solar System 5 1 Asteroid belt 5 2 Trojans 5 3 Near Earth asteroids 5 4 Martian moons 6 Characteristics 6 1 Size distribution 6 1 1 Largest asteroids 6 2 Rotation 6 3 Color 6 4 Surface features 6 5 Composition 6 5 1 Water 6 5 2 Organic compounds 7 Classification 7 1 Orbital classification 7 2 Spectral classification 7 2 1 Problems 7 3 Active asteroids 8 Exploration 8 1 Ground based observations 8 2 Space based observations 8 3 Space probe missions 8 3 1 Dedicated missions 8 3 2 Planned missions 9 Asteroid mining 10 Threats to Earth 10 1 Chicxulub impact 10 2 Asteroid deflection strategies 11 Fiction 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksHistory of observations EditOnly one asteroid 4 Vesta which has a relatively reflective surface is normally visible to the naked eye When favorably positioned 4 Vesta can be seen in dark skies Rarely small asteroids passing close to Earth may be visible to the naked eye for a short time 3 As of April 2022 update the Minor Planet Center had data on 1 199 224 minor planets in the inner and outer Solar System of which about 614 690 had enough information to be given numbered designations 4 Discovery of Ceres Edit In 1772 German astronomer Johann Elert Bode citing Johann Daniel Titius published a numerical procession known as the Titius Bode law now discredited Except for an unexplained gap between Mars and Jupiter Bode s formula seemed to predict the orbits of the known planets 5 6 He wrote the following explanation for the existence of a missing planet This latter point seems in particular to follow from the astonishing relation which the known six planets observe in their distances from the Sun Let the distance from the Sun to Saturn be taken as 100 then Mercury is separated by 4 such parts from the Sun Venus is 4 3 7 The Earth 4 6 10 Mars 4 12 16 Now comes a gap in this so orderly progression After Mars there follows a space of 4 24 28 parts in which no planet has yet been seen Can one believe that the Founder of the universe had left this space empty Certainly not From here we come to the distance of Jupiter by 4 48 52 parts and finally to that of Saturn by 4 96 100 parts 7 Bode s formula predicted another planet would be found with an orbital radius near 2 8 astronomical units AU or 420 million km from the Sun 6 The Titius Bode law got a boost with William Herschel s discovery of Uranus near the predicted distance for a planet beyond Saturn 5 In 1800 a group headed by Franz Xaver von Zach editor of the German astronomical journal Monatliche Correspondenz Monthly Correspondence sent requests to 24 experienced astronomers whom he dubbed the celestial police 6 asking that they combine their efforts and begin a methodical search for the expected planet 6 Although they did not discover Ceres they later found the asteroids 2 Pallas 3 Juno and 4 Vesta 6 One of the astronomers selected for the search was Giuseppe Piazzi a Catholic priest at the Academy of Palermo Sicily Before receiving his invitation to join the group Piazzi discovered Ceres on 1 January 1801 8 He was searching for the 87th star of the Catalogue of the Zodiacal stars of Mr la Caille 5 but found that it was preceded by another 5 Instead of a star Piazzi had found a moving star like object which he first thought was a comet 9 The light was a little faint and of the colour of Jupiter but similar to many others which generally are reckoned of the eighth magnitude Therefore I had no doubt of its being any other than a fixed star The evening of the third my suspicion was converted into certainty being assured it was not a fixed star Nevertheless before I made it known I waited till the evening of the fourth when I had the satisfaction to see it had moved at the same rate as on the preceding days 5 Piazzi observed Ceres a total of 24 times the final time on 11 February 1801 when illness interrupted his work He announced his discovery on 24 January 1801 in letters to only two fellow astronomers his compatriot Barnaba Oriani of Milan and Bode in Berlin 10 He reported it as a comet but since its movement is so slow and rather uniform it has occurred to me several times that it might be something better than a comet 5 In April Piazzi sent his complete observations to Oriani Bode and French astronomer Jerome Lalande The information was published in the September 1801 issue of the Monatliche Correspondenz 9 By this time the apparent position of Ceres had changed mostly due to Earth s motion around the Sun and was too close to the Sun s glare for other astronomers to confirm Piazzi s observations Toward the end of the year Ceres should have been visible again but after such a long time it was difficult to predict its exact position To recover Ceres mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss then 24 years old developed an efficient method of orbit determination 9 In a few weeks he predicted the path of Ceres and sent his results to von Zach On 31 December 1801 von Zach and fellow celestial policeman Heinrich W M Olbers found Ceres near the predicted position and thus recovered it 9 At 2 8 AU from the Sun Ceres appeared to fit the Titius Bode law almost perfectly however Neptune once discovered in 1846 was 8 AU closer than predicted leading most astronomers to conclude that the law was a coincidence 11 Piazzi named the newly discovered object Ceres Ferdinandea in honor of the patron goddess of Sicily and of King Ferdinand of Bourbon 7 Further search Edit Sizes of the first ten discovered asteroids compared to the Moon Three other asteroids 2 Pallas 3 Juno and 4 Vesta were discovered by von Zach s group over the next few years with Vesta found in 1807 6 No new asteroids were discovered until 1845 Amateur astronomer Karl Ludwig Hencke started his searches of new asteroids in 1830 and fifteen years later while looking for Vesta he found the asteroid later named 5 Astraea It was the first new asteroid discovery in 38 years Carl Friedrich Gauss was given the honour of naming the asteroid After this other astronomers joined 15 asteroids were found by the end of 1851 In 1868 when James Craig Watson discovered the 100th asteroid the French Academy of Sciences engraved the faces of Karl Theodor Robert Luther John Russell Hind and Hermann Goldschmidt the three most successful asteroid hunters at that time on a commemorative medallion marking the event 12 In 1891 Max Wolf pioneered the use of astrophotography to detect asteroids which appeared as short streaks on long exposure photographic plates 12 This dramatically increased the rate of detection compared with earlier visual methods Wolf alone discovered 248 asteroids beginning with 323 Brucia 13 whereas only slightly more than 300 had been discovered up to that point It was known that there were many more but most astronomers did not bother with them some calling them vermin of the skies 14 a phrase variously attributed to Eduard Suess 15 and Edmund Weiss 16 Even a century later only a few thousand asteroids were identified numbered and named 19th and 20th centuries Edit Cumulative discoveries of just the near Earth asteroids known by size 1980 2022 In the past asteroids were discovered by a four step process First a region of the sky was photographed by a wide field telescope or astrograph Pairs of photographs were taken typically one hour apart Multiple pairs could be taken over a series of days Second the two films or plates of the same region were viewed under a stereoscope A body in orbit around the Sun would move slightly between the pair of films Under the stereoscope the image of the body would seem to float slightly above the background of stars Third once a moving body was identified its location would be measured precisely using a digitizing microscope The location would be measured relative to known star locations 17 These first three steps do not constitute asteroid discovery the observer has only found an apparition which gets a provisional designation made up of the year of discovery a letter representing the half month of discovery and finally a letter and a number indicating the discovery s sequential number example 1998 FJ74 The last step is sending the locations and time of observations to the Minor Planet Center where computer programs determine whether an apparition ties together earlier apparitions into a single orbit If so the object receives a catalogue number and the observer of the first apparition with a calculated orbit is declared the discoverer and granted the honor of naming the object subject to the approval of the International Astronomical Union 18 Naming EditMain article Minor planet Naming 2013 EC shown here in radar images has a provisional designation By 1851 the Royal Astronomical Society decided that asteroids were being discovered at such a rapid rate that a different system was needed to categorize or name asteroids In 1852 when de Gasparis discovered the twentieth asteroid Benjamin Valz gave it a name and a number designating its rank among asteroid discoveries 20 Massalia Sometimes asteroids were discovered and not seen again So starting in 1892 new asteroids were listed by the year and a capital letter indicating the order in which the asteroid s orbit was calculated and registered within that specific year For example the first two asteroids discovered in 1892 were labeled 1892A and 1892B However there were not enough letters in the alphabet for all of the asteroids discovered in 1893 so 1893Z was followed by 1893AA A number of variations of these methods were tried including designations that included year plus a Greek letter in 1914 A simple chronological numbering system was established in 1925 12 19 Currently all newly discovered asteroids receive a provisional designation such as 2002 AT4 consisting of the year of discovery and an alphanumeric code indicating the half month of discovery and the sequence within that half month Once an asteroid s orbit has been confirmed it is given a number and later may also be given a name e g 433 Eros The formal naming convention uses parentheses around the number e g 433 Eros but dropping the parentheses is quite common Informally it is also common to drop the number altogether or to drop it after the first mention when a name is repeated in running text 20 In addition names can be proposed by the asteroid s discoverer within guidelines established by the International Astronomical Union 21 Symbols Edit Main article Astronomical symbols The first asteroids to be discovered were assigned iconic symbols like the ones traditionally used to designate the planets By 1855 there were two dozen asteroid symbols which often occurred in multiple variants 22 In 1851 after the fifteenth asteroid Eunomia had been discovered Johann Franz Encke made a major change in the upcoming 1854 edition of the Berliner Astronomisches Jahrbuch BAJ Berlin Astronomical Yearbook He introduced a disk circle a traditional symbol for a star as the generic symbol for an asteroid The circle was then numbered in order of discovery to indicate a specific asteroid The numbered circle convention was quickly adopted by astronomers and the next asteroid to be discovered 16 Psyche in 1852 was the first to be designated in that way at the time of its discovery However Psyche was given an iconic symbol as well as were a few other asteroids discovered over the next few years 20 Massalia was the first asteroid that was not assigned an iconic symbol and no iconic symbols were created after the 1855 discovery of 37 Fides a 23 Terminology Edit A composite image to the same scale of the asteroids imaged at high resolution prior to 2012 They are from largest to smallest 4 Vesta 21 Lutetia 253 Mathilde 243 Ida and its moon Dactyl 433 Eros 951 Gaspra 2867 Steins 25143 Itokawa Vesta left with Ceres center and the Moon right shown to scale The first discovered asteroid Ceres was originally considered a new planet b It was followed by the discovery of other similar bodies which with the equipment of the time appeared to be points of light like stars showing little or no planetary disc though readily distinguishable from stars due to their apparent motions This prompted the astronomer Sir William Herschel to propose the term asteroid c coined in Greek as ἀsteroeidhs or asteroeides meaning star like star shaped and derived from the Ancient Greek ἀsthr aster star planet In the early second half of the 19th century the terms asteroid and planet not always qualified as minor were still used interchangeably d Traditionally small bodies orbiting the Sun were classified as comets asteroids or meteoroids with anything smaller than one meter across being called a meteoroid The term asteroid never had a formal definition 28 with the broader term small Solar System bodies being preferred by the International Astronomical Union IAU 29 As no IAU definition exists asteroid can be defined as an irregularly shaped rocky body orbiting the Sun that does not qualify as a planet or a dwarf planet under the IAU definitions of those terms 30 When found asteroids were seen as a class of objects distinct from comets and there was no unified term for the two until small Solar System body was coined in 2006 The main difference between an asteroid and a comet is that a comet shows a coma due to sublimation of near surface ices by solar radiation A few objects have ended up being dual listed because they were first classified as minor planets but later showed evidence of cometary activity Conversely some perhaps all comets are eventually depleted of their surface volatile ices and become asteroid like A further distinction is that comets typically have more eccentric orbits than most asteroids asteroids with notably eccentric orbits are probably dormant or extinct comets 31 For almost two centuries from the discovery of Ceres in 1801 until the discovery of the first centaur 2060 Chiron in 1977 all known asteroids spent most of their time at or within the orbit of Jupiter though a few such as 944 Hidalgo ventured far beyond Jupiter for part of their orbit When astronomers started finding more small bodies that permanently resided further out than Jupiter now called centaurs they numbered them among the traditional asteroids There was debate over whether these objects should be considered asteroids or given a new classification Then when the first trans Neptunian object other than Pluto 15760 Albion was discovered in 1992 and especially when large numbers of similar objects started turning up new terms were invented to sidestep the issue Kuiper belt object trans Neptunian object scattered disc object and so on They inhabit the cold outer reaches of the Solar System where ices remain solid and comet like bodies are not expected to exhibit much cometary activity if centaurs or trans Neptunian objects were to venture close to the Sun their volatile ices would sublimate and traditional approaches would classify them as comets and not asteroids The innermost of these are the Kuiper belt objects called objects partly to avoid the need to classify them as asteroids or comets 32 They are thought to be predominantly comet like in composition though some may be more akin to asteroids 33 Furthermore most do not have the highly eccentric orbits associated with comets and the ones so far discovered are larger than traditional comet nuclei The much more distant Oort cloud is hypothesized to be the main reservoir of dormant comets Other recent observations such as the analysis of the cometary dust collected by the Stardust probe are increasingly blurring the distinction between comets and asteroids 34 suggesting a continuum between asteroids and comets rather than a sharp dividing line 35 The minor planets beyond Jupiter s orbit are sometimes also called asteroids especially in popular presentations e However it is becoming increasingly common for the term asteroid to be restricted to minor planets of the inner Solar System 32 Therefore this article will restrict itself for the most part to the classical asteroids objects of the asteroid belt Jupiter trojans and near Earth objects When the IAU introduced the class small Solar System bodies in 2006 to include most objects previously classified as minor planets and comets they created the class of dwarf planets for the largest minor planets those that have enough mass to have become ellipsoidal under their own gravity According to the IAU the term minor planet may still be used but generally the term Small Solar System Body will be preferred 37 Currently only the largest object in the asteroid belt Ceres at about 975 km 606 mi across has been placed in the dwarf planet category 38 39 Formation EditMain article Origin of the asteroid belt Many asteroids are the shattered remnants of planetesimals bodies within the young Sun s solar nebula that never grew large enough to become planets 40 It is thought that planetesimals in the asteroid belt evolved much like the rest of objects in the solar nebula until Jupiter neared its current mass at which point excitation from orbital resonances with Jupiter ejected over 99 of planetesimals in the belt Simulations and a discontinuity in spin rate and spectral properties suggest that asteroids larger than approximately 120 km 75 mi in diameter accreted during that early era whereas smaller bodies are fragments from collisions between asteroids during or after the Jovian disruption 41 Ceres and Vesta grew large enough to melt and differentiate with heavy metallic elements sinking to the core leaving rocky minerals in the crust 42 In the Nice model many Kuiper belt objects are captured in the outer asteroid belt at distances greater than 2 6 AU Most were later ejected by Jupiter but those that remained may be the D type asteroids and possibly include Ceres 43 Distribution within the Solar System EditSee also List of minor planet groups List of notable asteroids and List of minor planets A top view of asteroid group location in the inner solar system A map of planets and asteroid groups of the inner solar system Distances from sun are to scale object sizes are not Various dynamical groups of asteroids have been discovered orbiting in the inner Solar System Their orbits are perturbed by the gravity of other bodies in the Solar System and by the Yarkovsky effect Significant populations include Asteroid belt Edit Main article Asteroid belt The majority of known asteroids orbit within the asteroid belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter generally in relatively low eccentricity i e not very elongated orbits This belt is estimated to contain between 1 1 and 1 9 million asteroids larger than 1 km 0 6 mi in diameter 44 and millions of smaller ones These asteroids may be remnants of the protoplanetary disk and in this region the accretion of planetesimals into planets during the formative period of the Solar System was prevented by large gravitational perturbations by Jupiter Contrary to popular imagery the asteroid belt is mostly empty The asteroids are spread over such a large volume that reaching an asteroid without aiming carefully would be improbable Nonetheless hundreds of thousands of asteroids are currently known and the total number ranges in the millions or more depending on the lower size cutoff Over 200 asteroids are known to be larger than 100 km 45 and a survey in the infrared wavelengths has shown that the asteroid belt has between 700 000 and 1 7 million asteroids with a diameter of 1 km or more 46 The absolute magnitudes of most of the known asteroids are between 11 and 19 with the median at about 16 47 The total mass of the asteroid belt is estimated to be 2 39 1021 kg which is just 3 of the mass of the Moon the mass of the Kuiper Belt and Scattered Disk is over 100 times as large 48 The four largest objects Ceres Vesta Pallas and Hygiea account for maybe 62 of the belt s total mass with 39 accounted for by Ceres alone Trojans Edit Main article Trojan celestial body Trojans are populations that share an orbit with a larger planet or moon but do not collide with it because they orbit in one of the two Lagrangian points of stability L4 and L5 which lie 60 ahead of and behind the larger body In the Solar System most known trojans share the orbit of Jupiter They are divided into the Greek camp at L4 ahead of Jupiter and the Trojan camp at L5 trailing Jupiter More than a million Jupiter trojans larger than one kilometer are thought to exist 49 of which more than 7 000 are currently catalogued In other planetary orbits only nine Mars trojans 28 Neptune trojans two Uranus trojans and two Earth trojans have been found to date A temporary Venus trojan is also known Numerical orbital dynamics stability simulations indicate that Saturn and Uranus probably do not have any primordial trojans 50 Near Earth asteroids Edit Main article Near Earth asteroids Near Earth asteroids or NEAs are asteroids that have orbits that pass close to that of Earth Asteroids that actually cross Earth s orbital path are known as Earth crossers As of April 2022 update a total of 28 772 near Earth asteroids were known 878 have a diameter of one kilometer or larger 51 A small number of NEAs are extinct comets that have lost their volatile surface materials although having a faint or intermittent comet like tail does not necessarily result in a classification as a near Earth comet making the boundaries somewhat fuzzy The rest of the near Earth asteroids are driven out of the asteroid belt by gravitational interactions with Jupiter 52 53 Many asteroids have natural satellites minor planet moons As of October 2021 update there were 85 NEAs known to have at least one moon including three known to have two moons 54 The asteroid 3122 Florence one of the largest potentially hazardous asteroids with a diameter of 4 5 km 2 8 mi has two moons measuring 100 300 m 330 980 ft across which were discovered by radar imaging during the asteroid s 2017 approach to Earth 55 Near Earth asteroids are divided into groups based on their semi major axis a perihelion distance q and aphelion distance Q 56 52 The Atiras or Apoheles have orbits strictly inside Earth s orbit an Atira asteroid s aphelion distance Q is smaller than Earth s perihelion distance 0 983 AU That is Q lt 0 983 AU which implies that the asteroid s semi major axis is also less than 0 983 AU 57 The Atens have a semi major axis of less than 1 AU and cross Earth s orbit Mathematically a lt 1 0 AU and Q gt 0 983 AU 0 983 AU is Earth s perihelion distance The Apollos have a semi major axis of more than 1 AU and cross Earth s orbit Mathematically a gt 1 0 AU and q lt 1 017 AU 1 017 AU is Earth s aphelion distance The Amors have orbits strictly outside Earth s orbit an Amor asteroid s perihelion distance q is greater than Earth s aphelion distance 1 017 AU Amor asteroids are also near earth objects so q lt 1 3 AU In summary 1 017 AU lt q lt 1 3 AU This implies that the asteroid s semi major axis a is also larger than 1 017 AU Some Amor asteroid orbits cross the orbit of Mars Martian moons Edit Main articles Moons of Mars Phobos moon and Deimos moon Phobos Deimos It is unclear whether Martian moons Phobos and Deimos are captured asteroids or were formed due to impact event on Mars 58 Phobos and Deimos both have much in common with carbonaceous C type asteroids with spectra albedo and density very similar to those of C or D type asteroids 59 Based on their similarity one hypothesis is that both moons may be captured main belt asteroids 60 61 Both moons have very circular orbits which lie almost exactly in Mars s equatorial plane and hence a capture origin requires a mechanism for circularizing the initially highly eccentric orbit and adjusting its inclination into the equatorial plane most probably by a combination of atmospheric drag and tidal forces 62 although it is not clear whether sufficient time was available for this to occur for Deimos 58 Capture also requires dissipation of energy The current Martian atmosphere is too thin to capture a Phobos sized object by atmospheric braking 58 Geoffrey A Landis has pointed out that the capture could have occurred if the original body was a binary asteroid that separated under tidal forces 61 63 Phobos could be a second generation Solar System object that coalesced in orbit after Mars formed rather than forming concurrently out of the same birth cloud as Mars 64 Another hypothesis is that Mars was once surrounded by many Phobos and Deimos sized bodies perhaps ejected into orbit around it by a collision with a large planetesimal 65 The high porosity of the interior of Phobos based on the density of 1 88 g cm3 voids are estimated to comprise 25 to 35 percent of Phobos s volume is inconsistent with an asteroidal origin 66 Observations of Phobos in the thermal infrared suggest a composition containing mainly phyllosilicates which are well known from the surface of Mars The spectra are distinct from those of all classes of chondrite meteorites again pointing away from an asteroidal origin 67 Both sets of findings support an origin of Phobos from material ejected by an impact on Mars that reaccreted in Martian orbit 68 similar to the prevailing theory for the origin of Earth s moon Characteristics EditSize distribution Edit The asteroids of the Solar System categorized by size and number The masses of the largest asteroids in the main belt 1 Ceres blue 4 Vesta 2 Pallas 10 Hygiea 704 Interamnia 15 Eunomia and the remainder of the Main Belt pink The unit of mass is 1018 kg Asteroids vary greatly in size from almost 1000 km for the largest down to rocks just 1 meter across below which an object is classified as a meteoroid f The three largest are very much like miniature planets they are roughly spherical have at least partly differentiated interiors 69 and are thought to be surviving protoplanets The vast majority however are much smaller and are irregularly shaped they are thought to be either battered planetesimals or fragments of larger bodies The dwarf planet Ceres is by far the largest asteroid with a diameter of 940 km 580 mi The next largest are 4 Vesta and 2 Pallas both with diameters of just over 500 km 300 mi Vesta is the brightest of the four main belt asteroids that can on occasion be visible to the naked eye 70 On some rare occasions a near Earth asteroid may briefly become visible without technical aid see 99942 Apophis The mass of all the objects of the asteroid belt lying between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter is estimated to be 2394 6 1018 kg 3 25 of the mass of the Moon Of this Ceres comprises 938 1018 kg about 40 of the total Adding in the next three most massive objects Vesta 11 Pallas 8 5 and Hygiea 3 4 brings this figure up to a bit over 60 whereas the next seven most massive asteroids bring the total up to 70 48 The number of asteroids increases rapidly as their individual masses decrease The number of asteroids decreases markedly with increasing size Although the size distribution generally follows a power law there are bumps at about 5 km and 100 km where more asteroids than expected from such a curve are found Most asteroids larger than approximately 120 km in diameter are primordial surviving from the accretion epoch whereas most smaller asteroids are products of fragmentation of primordial asteroids The primordial population of the main belt was probably 200 times what it is today 71 72 Largest asteroids Edit See also Largest asteroids 42 of the largest objects in the asteroid belt captured by ESO s Very Large Telescope Eros Vesta and Ceres size comparison Three largest objects in the asteroid belt Ceres Vesta and Pallas are intact protoplanets that share many characteristics common to planets and are atypical compared to the majority of irregularly shaped asteroids The fourth largest asteroid Hygiea appears nearly spherical although it may have an undifferentiated interior 73 like the majority of asteroids The four largest asteroids constitute half the mass of the asteroid belt Ceres is the only asteroid that appears to have a plastic shape under its own gravity and hence the only one that is a dwarf planet 74 It has a much higher absolute magnitude than the other asteroids of around 3 32 75 and may possess a surface layer of ice 76 Like the planets Ceres is differentiated it has a crust a mantle and a core 76 No meteorites from Ceres have been found on Earth 77 Vesta too has a differentiated interior though it formed inside the Solar System s frost line and so is devoid of water 78 79 its composition is mainly of basaltic rock with minerals such as olivine 80 Aside from the large crater at its southern pole Rheasilvia Vesta also has an ellipsoidal shape Vesta is the parent body of the Vestian family and other V type asteroids and is the source of the HED meteorites which constitute 5 of all meteorites on Earth Pallas is unusual in that like Uranus it rotates on its side with its axis of rotation tilted at high angles to its orbital plane 81 Its composition is similar to that of Ceres high in carbon and silicon and perhaps partially differentiated 82 Pallas is the parent body of the Palladian family of asteroids Hygiea is the largest carbonaceous asteroid 83 and unlike the other largest asteroids lies relatively close to the plane of the ecliptic It is the largest member and presumed parent body of the Hygiean family of asteroids Because there is no sufficiently large crater on the surface to be the source of that family as there is on Vesta it is thought that Hygiea may have been completely disrupted in the collision that formed the Hygiean family and recoalesced after losing a bit less than 2 of its mass Observations taken with the Very Large Telescope s SPHERE imager in 2017 and 2018 revealed that Hygiea has a nearly spherical shape which is consistent both with it being in hydrostatic equilibrium or formerly being in hydrostatic equilibrium or with being disrupted and recoalescing 84 85 Internal differentiation of large asteroids is possibly related to their lack of natural satellites as satellites of main belt asteroids are mostly believed to form from collisional disruption creating a rubble pile structure 77 Attributes of largest asteroids Name Orbitalradius AU Orbitalperiod years Inclinationto ecliptic Orbitaleccentricity Diameter km Diameter of Moon Mass 1018 kg Mass of Ceres Density g cm3 Rotationperiod hr Ceres 2 77 4 60 10 6 0 079 964 964 892 mean 939 4 27 938 100 2 16 0 01 9 07Vesta 2 36 3 63 7 1 0 089 573 557 446 mean 525 4 15 259 28 3 46 0 04 5 34Pallas 2 77 4 62 34 8 0 231 550 516 476 mean 511 4 15 204 3 21 2 92 0 08 7 81Hygiea 3 14 5 56 3 8 0 117 450 430 424 mean 433 8 12 87 7 9 2 06 0 20 13 8Rotation Edit Further information List of fast rotators minor planets and List of slow rotators minor planets Measurements of the rotation rates of large asteroids in the asteroid belt show that there is an upper limit Very few asteroids with a diameter larger than 100 meters have a rotation period less than 2 2 hours 86 For asteroids rotating faster than approximately this rate the inertial force at the surface is greater than the gravitational force so any loose surface material would be flung out However a solid object should be able to rotate much more rapidly This suggests that most asteroids with a diameter over 100 meters are rubble piles formed through the accumulation of debris after collisions between asteroids 87 Color Edit Asteroids become darker and redder with age due to space weathering 88 However evidence suggests most of the color change occurs rapidly in the first hundred thousand years limiting the usefulness of spectral measurement for determining the age of asteroids 89 Surface features Edit Cratered terrain on 4 Vesta Except for the big four Ceres Pallas Vesta and Hygiea asteroids are likely to be broadly similar in appearance if irregular in shape 50 km 31 mi 253 Mathilde is a rubble pile saturated with craters with diameters the size of the asteroid s radius Earth based observations of 300 km 186 mi 511 Davida one of the largest asteroids after the big four reveal a similarly angular profile suggesting it is also saturated with radius size craters 90 Medium sized asteroids such as Mathilde and 243 Ida that have been observed up close also reveal a deep regolith covering the surface Of the big four Pallas and Hygiea are practically unknown Vesta has compression fractures encircling a radius size crater at its south pole but is otherwise a spheroid Dawn spacecraft revealed that Ceres has a heavily cratered surface but with fewer large craters than expected 91 Models based on the formation of the current asteroid belt had suggested Ceres should possess 10 to 15 craters larger than 400 km 250 mi in diameter 91 The largest confirmed crater on Ceres Kerwan Basin is 284 km 176 mi across 92 The most likely reason for this is viscous relaxation of the crust slowly flattening out larger impacts 91 Composition Edit Asteroids are classified by their characteristic emission spectra with the majority falling into three main groups C type M type and S type These were named after and are generally identified with carbonaceous carbon rich metallic and silicaceous stony compositions respectively The physical composition of asteroids is varied and in most cases poorly understood Ceres appears to be composed of a rocky core covered by an icy mantle where Vesta is thought to have a nickel iron core olivine mantle and basaltic crust 93 Thought to be the largest undifferentiated asteroid 10 Hygiea seems to have a uniformly primitive composition of carbonaceous chondrite but it may actually be a differentiated asteroid that was globally disrupted by an impact and then reassembled Other asteroids appear to be the remnant cores or mantles of proto planets high in rock and metal Most small asteroids are believed to be piles of rubble held together loosely by gravity although the largest are probably solid Some asteroids have moons or are co orbiting binaries rubble piles moons binaries and scattered asteroid families are thought to be the results of collisions that disrupted a parent asteroid or possibly a planet 94 In the main asteroid belt there appear to be two primary populations of asteroid a dark volatile rich population consisting of the C type and P type asteroids with albedos less that 0 10 and densities under 2 2 g cm3 and a dense volatile poor population consisting of the S type and M type asteroids with albedos over 0 15 and densities greater than 2 7 Within these populations larger asteroids are denser presumably due to compression There appears to be minimal macro porosity interstitial vacuum in the score of asteroids with masses greater than 10 1018 kg 95 Composition is calculated from three primary sources albedo surface spectrum and density The last can only be determined accurately by observing the orbits of moons the asteroid might have So far every asteroid with moons has turned out to be a rubble pile a loose conglomeration of rock and metal that may be half empty space by volume The investigated asteroids are as large as 280 km in diameter and include 121 Hermione 268 186 183 km and 87 Sylvia 384 262 232 km Few asteroids are larger than 87 Sylvia none of them have moons The fact that such large asteroids as Sylvia may be rubble piles presumably due to disruptive impacts has important consequences for the formation of the Solar System computer simulations of collisions involving solid bodies show them destroying each other as often as merging but colliding rubble piles are more likely to merge This means that the cores of the planets could have formed relatively quickly 96 Water Edit Main article Asteroidal water Scientists hypothesize that some of the first water brought to Earth was delivered by asteroid impacts after the collision that produced the Moon 97 In 2009 the presence of water ice was confirmed on the surface of 24 Themis using NASA s Infrared Telescope Facility The surface of the asteroid appears completely covered in ice As this ice layer is sublimating it may be getting replenished by a reservoir of ice under the surface Organic compounds were also detected on the surface 98 99 97 100 The presence of ice on 24 Themis makes the initial theory plausible 97 In October 2013 water was detected on an extrasolar body for the first time on an asteroid orbiting the white dwarf GD 61 101 On 22 January 2014 European Space Agency ESA scientists reported the detection for the first definitive time of water vapor on Ceres the largest object in the asteroid belt 102 The detection was made by using the far infrared abilities of the Herschel Space Observatory 103 The finding is unexpected because comets not asteroids are typically considered to sprout jets and plumes According to one of the scientists The lines are becoming more and more blurred between comets and asteroids 103 Findings have shown that solar winds can react with the oxygen in the upper layer of the asteroids and create water It has been estimated that every cubic metre of irradiated rock could contain up to 20 litres study was conducted using an atom probe tomography numbers are given for the Itokawa S type asteroid 104 105 Acfer 049 a meteorite discovered in Algeria in 1990 was shown in 2019 to have an ultraporous lithology UPL porous texture that could be formed by removal of ice that filled these pores this suggests that UPL represent fossils of primordial ice 106 Organic compounds Edit Asteroids contain traces of amino acids and other organic compounds and some speculate that asteroid impacts may have seeded the early Earth with the chemicals necessary to initiate life or may have even brought life itself to Earth an event called panspermia 107 108 In August 2011 a report based on NASA studies with meteorites found on Earth was published suggesting DNA and RNA components adenine guanine and related organic molecules may have been formed on asteroids and comets in outer space 109 110 111 In November 2019 scientists reported detecting for the first time sugar molecules including ribose in meteorites suggesting that chemical processes on asteroids can produce some fundamentally essential bio ingredients important to life and supporting the notion of an RNA world prior to a DNA based origin of life on Earth and possibly as well the notion of panspermia 112 113 114 Classification EditAsteroids are commonly categorized according to two criteria the characteristics of their orbits and features of their reflectance spectrum Orbital classification Edit Main articles Asteroid group and Asteroid family A complex horseshoe orbit the vertical looping is due to inclination of the smaller body s orbit to that of the Earth and would be absent if both orbited in the same plane Sun Earth 419624 2010 SO16 Many asteroids have been placed in groups and families based on their orbital characteristics Apart from the broadest divisions it is customary to name a group of asteroids after the first member of that group to be discovered Groups are relatively loose dynamical associations whereas families are tighter and result from the catastrophic break up of a large parent asteroid sometime in the past 115 Families are more common and easier to identify within the main asteroid belt but several small families have been reported among the Jupiter trojans 116 Main belt families were first recognized by Kiyotsugu Hirayama in 1918 and are often called Hirayama families in his honor About 30 35 of the bodies in the asteroid belt belong to dynamical families each thought to have a common origin in a past collision between asteroids A family has also been associated with the plutoid dwarf planet Haumea Some asteroids have unusual horseshoe orbits that are co orbital with Earth or another planet Examples are 3753 Cruithne and 2002 AA29 The first instance of this type of orbital arrangement was discovered between Saturn s moons Epimetheus and Janus Sometimes these horseshoe objects temporarily become quasi satellites for a few decades or a few hundred years before returning to their earlier status Both Earth and Venus are known to have quasi satellites Such objects if associated with Earth or Venus or even hypothetically Mercury are a special class of Aten asteroids However such objects could be associated with the outer planets as well Spectral classification Edit Main article Asteroid spectral types In 1975 an asteroid taxonomic system based on color albedo and spectral shape was developed by Chapman Morrison and Zellner 117 These properties are thought to correspond to the composition of the asteroid s surface material The original classification system had three categories C types for dark carbonaceous objects 75 of known asteroids S types for stony silicaceous objects 17 of known asteroids and U for those that did not fit into either C or S This classification has since been expanded to include many other asteroid types The number of types continues to grow as more asteroids are studied The two most widely used taxonomies now used are the Tholen classification and SMASS classification The former was proposed in 1984 by David J Tholen and was based on data collected from an eight color asteroid survey performed in the 1980s This resulted in 14 asteroid categories 118 In 2002 the Small Main Belt Asteroid Spectroscopic Survey resulted in a modified version of the Tholen taxonomy with 24 different types Both systems have three broad categories of C S and X asteroids where X consists of mostly metallic asteroids such as the M type There are also several smaller classes 119 The proportion of known asteroids falling into the various spectral types does not necessarily reflect the proportion of all asteroids that are of that type some types are easier to detect than others biasing the totals Problems Edit Originally spectral designations were based on inferences of an asteroid s composition 120 However the correspondence between spectral class and composition is not always very good and a variety of classifications are in use This has led to significant confusion Although asteroids of different spectral classifications are likely to be composed of different materials there are no assurances that asteroids within the same taxonomic class are composed of the same or similar materials Active asteroids Edit Main article Active asteroid Asteroid 101955 Bennu seen ejecting particles by the OSIRIS RExActive asteroids are objects that have asteroid like orbits but show comet like visual characteristics That is they show comae tails or other visual evidence of mass loss like a comet but their orbit remains within Jupiter s orbit like an asteroid 121 122 These bodies were originally designated main belt comets MBCs in 2006 by astronomers David Jewitt and Henry Hsieh but this name implies they are necessarily icy in composition like a comet and that they only exist within the main belt whereas the growing population of active asteroids shows that this is not always the case 121 123 124 The first active asteroid discovered is 7968 Elst Pizarro It was discovered as an asteroid in 1979 but then was found to have a tail by Eric Elst and Guido Pizarro in 1996 and given the cometary designation 133P Elst Pizarro 121 125 Another notable object is 311P PanSTARRS observations made by the Hubble Space Telescope revealed that it had six comet like tails 126 The tails are suspected to be streams of material ejected by the asteroid as a result of a rubble pile asteroid spinning fast enough to remove material from it 127 Exploration EditUntil the age of space travel objects in the asteroid belt could only be observed with large telescopes their shapes and terrain remaining a mystery The best modern ground based telescopes and the Earth orbiting Hubble Space Telescope can only resolve a small amount of detail on the surfaces of the largest asteroids Limited information about the shapes and compositions of asteroids can be inferred from their light curves variation in brightness during rotation and their spectral properties Sizes can be estimated by timing the lengths of star occultations when an asteroid passes directly in front of a star Radar imaging can yield good information about asteroid shapes and orbital and rotational parameters especially for near Earth asteroids Spacecraft flybys can provide much more data than any ground or space based observations sample return missions gives insights about regolith composition Ground based observations Edit The 70m antenna at Goldstone Observatory Radar observations of near Earth asteroid 505657 2014 SR339 as seen by Arecibo As asteroids are rather small and faint objects the data that can be obtained from ground based observations GBO are limited By means of ground based optical telescopes the visual magnitude can be obtained when converted into the absolute magnitude it gives a rough estimate of the asteroid s size Light curve measurements can also be made by GBO when collected over a long period of time it allows an estimate of the rotational period the pole orientation sometimes and a rough estimate of the asteroid s shape Spectral data both visible light and near infrared spectroscopy gives information about the object s composition used to classify the observed asteroids Such observations are limited as they provide information about only the thin layer on the surface up to several micrometers 128 As planetologist Patrick Michel writes Mid to thermal infrared observations along with polarimetry measurements are probably the only data that give some indication of actual physical properties Measuring the heat flux of an asteroid at a single wavelength gives an estimate of the dimensions of the object these measurements have lower uncertainty than measurements of the reflected sunlight in the visible light spectral region If the two measurements can be combined both the effective diameter and the geometric albedo the latter being a measure of the brightness at zero phase angle that is when illumination comes from directly behind the observer can be derived In addition thermal measurements at two or more wavelengths plus the brightness in the visible light region give information on the thermal properties The thermal inertia which is a measure of how fast a material heats up or cools off of most observed asteroids is lower than the bare rock reference value but greater than that of the lunar regolith this observation indicates the presence of an insulating layer of granular material on their surface Moreover there seems to be a trend perhaps related to the gravitational environment that smaller objects with lower gravity have a small regolith layer consisting of coarse grains while larger objects have a thicker regolith layer consisting of fine grains However the detailed properties of this regolith layer are poorly known from remote observations Moreover the relation between thermal inertia and surface roughness is not straightforward so one needs to interpret the thermal inertia with caution 128 Near Earth asteroids that come into close vicinity of the planet can be studied in more details with radar it provides information about the surface of the asteroid for example can show the presence of craters and boulders Such observations were conducted by the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico 305 meter dish and Goldstone Observatory in California 70 meter dish Radar observations can also be used for accurate determination of the orbital and rotational dynamics of observed objects 128 Space based observations Edit WISE infrared space telescope Asteroid 6481 Tenzing center is seen moving against a background of stars in this series of images taken by the James Webb Space Telescope s instrument NIRCam Both space and ground based observatories conducted asteroid search programs the space based searches are expected to detect more objects because there is no atmosphere to interfere and because they can observe larger portions of the sky NEOWISE observed more than 100 000 asteroids of the main belt Spitzer Space Telescope observed more than 700 near Earth asteroids These observations determined rough sizes of the majority of observed objects but provided limited detail about surface properties such as regolith depth and composition angle of repose cohesion and porosity 128 Asteroids were also studied by the Hubble Space Telescope such as tracking the colliding asteroids in the main belt 129 130 break up of an asteroid 131 observing an active asteroid with six comet like tails 132 and observing asteroids that were chosen as targets of dedicated missions 133 134 Space probe missions Edit See also List of minor planets and comets visited by spacecraft and List of missions to minor planets According to Patrick Michel The internal structure of asteroids is inferred only from indirect evidence bulk densities measured by spacecraft the orbits of natural satellites in the case of asteroid binaries and the drift of an asteroid s orbit due to the Yarkovsky thermal effect A spacecraft near an asteroid is perturbed enough by the asteroid s gravity to allow an estimate of the asteroid s mass The volume is then estimated using a model of the asteroid s shape Mass and volume allow the derivation of the bulk density whose uncertainty is usually dominated by the errors made on the volume estimate The internal porosity of asteroids can be inferred by comparing their bulk density with that of their assumed meteorite analogues dark asteroids seem to be more porous gt 40 than bright ones The nature of this porosity is unclear 128 Dedicated missions Edit The first asteroid to be photographed in close up was 951 Gaspra in 1991 followed in 1993 by 243 Ida and its moon Dactyl all of which were imaged by the Galileo probe en route to Jupiter Other asteroids briefly visited by spacecraft en route to other destinations include 9969 Braille by Deep Space 1 in 1999 5535 Annefrank by Stardust in 2002 2867 Steins and 21 Lutetia by the Rosetta probe in 2008 and 4179 Toutatis China s lunar orbiter Chang e 2 which flew within 3 2 km 2 mi in 2012 The first dedicated asteroid probe was NASA s NEAR Shoemaker which photographed 253 Mathilde in 1997 before entering into orbit around 433 Eros finally landing on its surface in 2001 It was the first spacecraft to successfully orbit and land on an asteroid 135 From September to November 2005 the Japanese Hayabusa probe studied 25143 Itokawa in detail and returned samples of its surface to Earth on 13 June 2010 the first asteroid sample return mission In 2007 NASA launched the Dawn spacecraft which orbited 4 Vesta for a year and observed the dwarf planet Ceres for three years Hayabusa2 a probe launched by JAXA 2014 orbited its target asteroid 162173 Ryugu for more than a year and took samples that were delivered to Earth in 2020 The spacecraft is now on an extended mission and expected to arrive at a new target in 2031 NASA launched the OSIRIS REx in 2016 a sample return mission to asteroid 101955 Bennu In 2021 the probe departed the asteroid with a sample from its surface Sample delivery to Earth is expected on September 24 2023 136 The spacecraft will continue on an extended mission designated OSIRIS APEX to explore near Earth asteroid Apophis in 2029 In 2021 NASA launched Double Asteroid Redirection Test DART a mission to test technology for defending Earth against potential hazardous objects DART deliberately crashed into the minor planet moon Dimorphos of the double asteroid Didymos in September 2022 to assess the potential of a spacecraft impact to deflect an asteroid from a collision course with Earth 137 In October NASA declared DART a success confirming it had shortened Dimorphos orbital period around Didymos by about 32 minutes 138 Asteroid dedicated space probes Hayabusa2 Dawn Lucy PsychePlanned missions Edit Asteroids and comets visited by spacecraft as of 2019 except Ceres and Vesta to scale Currently several asteroid dedicated missions are planned by NASA JAXA ESA and CNSA NASA s Lucy launched in 2021 would visit eight asteroids one from the main belt and seven Jupiter trojans it is the first mission to trojans The main mission would start in 2027 139 140 ESA s Hera planned for launch in 2024 will study the results of the DART impact It will measure the size and morphology of the crater and momentum transmitted by the impact to determine the efficiency of the deflection produced by DART NASA s Psyche would be launched in 2023 or 2024 to study the large metallic asteroid of the same name JAXA s DESTINY is a mission for a flyby of the Geminids meteor shower parent body 3200 Phaethon as well as various minor bodies Its launch is planned for 2024 141 CNSA s Tianwen 2 is planned to launch in 2025 142 It will use solar electric propulsion to explore the co orbital near Earth asteroid 469219 Kamoʻoalewa and the active asteroid 311P PanSTARRS The spacecraft will collect samples of the regolith of Kamo oalewa 143 Asteroid mining Edit Artist s concept of a crewed mission to an asteroid Main articles Asteroid mining and Colonization of the asteroids The concept of asteroid mining was proposed in 1970s Matt Anderson defines successful asteroid mining as the development of a mining program that is both financially self sustaining and profitable to its investors 144 It has been suggested that asteroids might be used as a source of materials that may be rare or exhausted on Earth 145 or materials for constructing space habitats Materials that are heavy and expensive to launch from Earth may someday be mined from asteroids and used for space manufacturing and construction 146 147 As resource depletion on Earth becomes more real the idea of extracting valuable elements from asteroids and returning these to Earth for profit or using space based resources to build solar power satellites and space habitats 148 149 becomes more attractive Hypothetically water processed from ice could refuel orbiting propellant depots 150 151 From the astrobiological perspective asteroid prospecting could provide scientific data for the search for extraterrestrial intelligence SETI Some astrophysicists have suggested that if advanced extraterrestrial civilizations employed asteroid mining long ago the hallmarks of these activities might be detectable 152 153 154 Mining Ceres is also considered a possibility As the largest body in the asteroid belt Ceres could become the main base and transport hub for future asteroid mining infrastructure 155 allowing mineral resources to be transported to Mars the Moon and Earth Because of its small escape velocity combined with large amounts of water ice it also could serve as a source of water fuel and oxygen for ships going through and beyond the asteroid belt 155 Transportation from Mars or the Moon to Ceres would be even more energy efficient than transportation from Earth to the Moon 156 Threats to Earth EditSee also List of Earth crossing minor planets Frequency of bolides small asteroids roughly 1 to 20 meters in diameter impacting Earth s atmosphere There is increasing interest in identifying asteroids whose orbits cross Earth s and that could given enough time collide with Earth The three most important groups of near Earth asteroids are the Apollos Amors and Atens The near Earth asteroid 433 Eros had been discovered as long ago as 1898 and the 1930s brought a flurry of similar objects In order of discovery these were 1221 Amor 1862 Apollo 2101 Adonis and finally 69230 Hermes which approached within 0 005 AU of Earth in 1937 Astronomers began to realize the possibilities of Earth impact Two events in later decades increased the alarm the increasing acceptance of the Alvarez hypothesis that an impact event resulted in the Cretaceous Paleogene extinction and the 1994 observation of Comet Shoemaker Levy 9 crashing into Jupiter The U S military also declassified the information that its military satellites built to detect nuclear explosions had detected hundreds of upper atmosphere impacts by objects ranging from one to ten meters across All of these considerations helped spur the launch of highly efficient surveys consisting of charge coupled device CCD cameras and computers directly connected to telescopes As of 2011 update it was estimated that 89 to 96 of near Earth asteroids one kilometer or larger in diameter had been discovered 51 A list of teams using such systems includes 157 158 Lincoln Near Earth Asteroid Research LINEAR Near Earth Asteroid Tracking NEAT Spacewatch Lowell Observatory Near Earth Object Search LONEOS Catalina Sky Survey CSS Pan STARRS NEOWISE Asteroid Terrestrial impact Last Alert System ATLAS Campo Imperatore Near Earth Object Survey CINEOS Japanese Spaceguard Association Asiago DLR Asteroid Survey ADAS As of 29 October 2018 update the LINEAR system alone had discovered 147 132 asteroids 159 Among the surveys 19 266 near Earth asteroids have been discovered 160 including almost 900 more than 1 km 0 6 mi in diameter 161 In April 2018 the B612 Foundation reported It is 100 percent certain we ll be hit by a devastating asteroid but we re not 100 percent sure when 162 In June 2018 the US National Science and Technology Council warned that America is unprepared for an asteroid impact event and has developed and released the National Near Earth Object Preparedness Strategy Action Plan to better prepare 163 164 165 According to expert testimony in the United States Congress in 2013 NASA would require at least five years of preparation before a mission to intercept an asteroid could be launched 166 The United Nations declared 30 June as International Asteroid Day to educate the public about asteroids The date of International Asteroid Day commemorates the anniversary of the Tunguska asteroid impact over Siberia on 30 June 1908 167 168 Chicxulub impact Edit Main article Chicxulub crater Artist s impression of an asteroid impact on Earth The Chicxulub crater is an impact crater buried underneath the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico Its center is offshore near the communities of Chicxulub Puerto and Chicxulub Pueblo after which the crater is named It was formed when a large asteroid about 10 kilometers 6 2 miles in diameter struck the Earth The crater is estimated to be 180 kilometers 110 miles in diameter and 20 kilometers 12 miles in depth It is one of the largest confirmed impact structures on Earth and the only one whose peak ring is intact and directly accessible for scientific research In the late 1970s geologist Walter Alvarez and his father Nobel Prize winning scientist Luis Walter Alvarez put forth their theory that the Cretaceous Paleogene extinction was caused by an impact event 169 The main evidence of such an impact was contained in a thin layer of clay present in the K Pg boundary in Gubbio Italy The Alvarezes and colleagues reported that it contained an abnormally high concentration of iridium a chemical element rare on earth but common in asteroids 170 171 Iridium levels in this layer were as much as 160 times above the background level 172 It was hypothesized that the iridium was spread into the atmosphere when the impactor was vaporized and settled across the Earth s surface among other material thrown up by the impact producing the layer of iridium enriched clay 173 At the time consensus was not settled on what caused the Cretaceous Paleogene extinction and the boundary layer with theories including a nearby supernova climate change or a geomagnetic reversal 172 1095 The Alvarezes impact hypothesis was rejected by many paleontologists who believed that the lack of fossils found close to the K Pg boundary the three meter problem suggested a more gradual die off of fossil species 169 174 There is broad consensus that the Chicxulub impactor was an asteroid with a carbonaceous chondrite composition rather than a comet 175 The impactor was around 10 kilometers 6 2 miles in diameter 175 large enough that if set at sea level it would have reached taller than Mount Everest 174 9 Asteroid deflection strategies Edit Main articles Asteroid deflection strategies and Asteroid impact avoidance Artist s concept of spacious structure of near Earth asteroid 2011 MD 176 Various collision avoidance techniques have different trade offs with respect to metrics such as overall performance cost failure risks operations and technology readiness 177 There are various methods for changing the course of an asteroid comet 178 These can be differentiated by various types of attributes such as the type of mitigation deflection or fragmentation energy source kinetic electromagnetic gravitational solar thermal or nuclear and approach strategy interception 179 180 rendezvous or remote station Strategies fall into two basic sets fragmentation and delay 178 181 Fragmentation concentrates on rendering the impactor harmless by fragmenting it and scattering the fragments so that they miss the Earth or are small enough to burn up in the atmosphere Delay exploits the fact that both the Earth and the impactor are in orbit An impact occurs when both reach the same point in space at the same time or more correctly when some point on Earth s surface intersects the impactor s orbit when the impactor arrives Since the Earth is approximately 12 750 km in diameter and moves at approx 30 km per second in its orbit it travels a distance of one planetary diameter in about 425 seconds or slightly over seven minutes Delaying or advancing the impactor s arrival by times of this magnitude can depending on the exact geometry of the impact cause it to miss the Earth 182 Project Icarus was one of the first projects designed in 1967 as a contingency plan in case of collision with 1566 Icarus The plan relied on the new Saturn V rocket which did not make its first flight until after the report had been completed Six Saturn V rockets would be used each launched at variable intervals from months to hours away from impact Each rocket was to be fitted with a single 100 megaton nuclear warhead as well as a modified Apollo Service Module and uncrewed Apollo Command Module for guidance to the target The warheads would be detonated 30 meters from the surface deflecting or partially destroying the asteroid Depending on the subsequent impacts on the course or the destruction of the asteroid later missions would be modified or cancelled as needed The last ditch launch of the sixth rocket would be 18 hours prior to impact 183 Fiction EditMain article Asteroids in fiction Asteroids and the asteroid belt are a staple of science fiction stories Asteroids play several potential roles in science fiction as places human beings might colonize resources for extracting minerals hazards encountered by spacecraft traveling between two other points and as a threat to life on Earth or other inhabited planets dwarf planets and natural satellites by potential impact See also EditList of asteroid close approaches to Earth List of exceptional asteroids Lost minor planet Meanings of minor planet namesNotes Edit Except for Pluto and in the astrological community for a few outer bodies such as 2060 Chiron Ceres is the largest asteroid and now classified as a dwarf planet All other asteroids are now classified as small Solar System bodies along with comets 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Arizona Press ISBN 978 0 8165 1123 5 Cunningham Clifford J 2001 The first asteroid Ceres 1801 2001 Surfside Fla Star Lab Press ISBN 978 0 9708162 1 4 Peebles Curtis 2000 Asteroids a history Washington DC Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN 978 1 56098 389 7 Barnes Svarney Patricia L 2003 Asteroid Earth destroyer or New Frontier Cambridge Mass Basic Books ISBN 978 0 7382 0885 5 Kowal Charles T 1996 Asteroids their nature and utilization 2nd ed Chichester England J Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 96039 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Asteroids Look up asteroid in Wiktionary the free dictionary Alphabetical list of minor planet names Minor Planet Center International Astronomical Union Asteroid articles in Planetary Science Research Discoveries Planetary Science University of Hawaii JPL Asteroid Watch site Jet Propulsion Laboratory NASA Asteroid and Comet Watch site 21 January 2015 Asteroid size comparisons video 2 40 on YouTube Portals Astronomy Spaceflight Outer space Solar System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Asteroid amp oldid 1133147670, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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