Bibcode
Scheeres, Daniel J.; Pravec, P.; Vokrouhlicky, D.; Polishook, D.; Harris, A. W.; Galad, A.; Vaduvescu, O.; Pozo, F.; Barr, A.; Longa, P.; Vachier, F.; Colas, F.; Pray, D. P.; Pollock, J.; Reichart, D.; Ivarsen, K.; Haislip, J.; LaCluyze, A.; Kusnirak, P.; Henych, T.; Marchis, F.; Macomber, B.; Jacobson, S. A.; Krugly, Y. N.; Sergeev, A.; Leroy, A.
Referencia bibliográfica
American Astronomical Society, DDA meeting #41, #2.06; Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 41, p.926
Fecha de publicación:
5
2010
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
A population of small main-belt asteroid pairs (MBAs) residing on very
similar heliocentric orbits have been found and studied recently
(Vokrouhlicky and Nesvorny, Astron. J. 136: 280 2008 and Astron. J. 137:
111 2009, Pravec and Vokrouhlicky, Icarus 204: 580 2009). These asteroid
pairs show some common properties: they are ubiquitous with pairs found
throughout the asteroid population, pair members are separated with low
hyperbolic escape velocities (as low as 0.17 m/s), they are young with
most pairs probably separated less than 1 Myr ago, and their sizes and
mass ratios overlap with the population of orbiting, bound binary
systems. Previous investigations of binary asteroids suggests that they
were formed from parent bodies spinning at a critical rate by some sort
of fission or mass shedding process (Pravec and Harris, Icarus 190: 250
2007, Scheeres, Icarus 189: 370 2007, Walsh et al., Nature 454: 188
2008), however the possibility that these two populations of asteroid
pairs and binaries were related was intriguing but lacked of
observational data.
We report on a systematic observation campaign of spin rates, relative
sizes and shapes of paired asteroids which enables this population to be
analyzed. Two key characteristics of the asteroid pairs population
appear: the primary spin rate is correlated with the mass ratio between
a pair's components, and there is a cut-off in mass ratios of asteroid
pairs above a value of 0.2. Both of these results are predicted by the
rotational fission process hypothesized in Scheeres (2007), and suggests
this or a similar process as the genesis of the asteroid pairs and by
implication as a fundamental process in the formation of asteroid binary
systems. This formation mechanism is distinct from the Walsh et al.
(2008) hypotheses to explain the population of orbiting, bound binary
asteroid systems.