News on asteroids
- Infrared survey exposes Nnera-Earth asteroid threaths
- ESA invites amateur astronomers to asteroid-hunti
- Dawn uncovers mineraology of the asteroid Vesta
- Dawn sees new surface features on giant asteroid
- Near-miss asteroid will pass earth again in 2013
- Asteroid hits house in Oslo, Norway
- Space-environment of an asteroid
- Bus-sized asteroid passes Earth
- Vesta is most likely cold enough to contain water-ice
- First images of Vesta from low-orbit
- Fresh impact craters on asteroid Vesta
- Take a virtual 3D tour over asteroid Vesta
- High-school student doubles NEO-tracking accuracy
- Asteroid YU55 is just a pile of rocks
- More images of asteroid 2005 YU55
- New video of asteroid 2005 YU55
- Asteroid Lutetia: A rare surviver from the birth of the Earth
- First video of asteroid 2005YU55
- New images of asteroid passing Earth
- 400m asteroid passes Earth tuesday
- Asteroid Lutetia is a "failed planet"
- Large asteroid passing Earth nov. 4
- Researchers reconstruct asteroid impact
- Asteroid displays comet-like tail
- The mysteries of asteroid Minerva and its moons
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Asteroid Lutetia is a "failed planet"
Thursday, 27 October 2011 21:54
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| Solar system - Asteroids |
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Analysis of the data from ESA's Rosetta spacecraft flyby of asteroid Lutetia last year has revealed it to be a primitive body, left over as the planets were forming in our Solar System. Results from Rosetta's fleeting flyby also suggest that this mini-world tried to grow a metal heart. Rosetta flew past Lutetia on 10 July 2010 at a speed of 54 000 km/hr and a closest distance of 3170 km. At the time, the 130 km-long asteroid was the largest encountered by a spacecraft. Since then, scientists have been analysing the data taken during the brief encounter. All previous flybys went past objects, which were fragments of once-larger bodies. However, during the encounter, scientists speculated that Lutetia might be an older, primitive 'mini-world'. Now they are much more certain. Images from the OSIRIS camera reveal that parts of Lutetia's surface are around 3,6 billion years old. Other parts are young by astronomical standards, at 50–80 million years old. Astronomers estimate the age of airless planets, moons, and asteroids by counting craters. Each bowl-shaped depression on the surface is made by an impact. The older the surface, the more impacts it will have accumulated. Some parts of Lutetia are heavily cratered, implying that it is very old. On the other hand, the youngest areas of Lutetia are landslides, probably triggered by the vibrations from particularly jarring nearby impacts.
Debris resulting from these many impacts now lies across the surface as a 1km-thick layer of pulverised rock.
Some impacts must have been so large that they broke off whole chunks of Lutetia, gradually sculpting it into the battered wreck we see today. "We don't think Lutetia was born looking like this," says Holger Sierks, Max-Planck-Institut für Sonnensystemforschung, Lindau, Germany. "It was probably round when it formed."
Rosetta's VIRTIS spectrometer found that Lutetia's composition is remarkably uniform across all the observed regions. "It is striking that an object of this size can bear scars of events so different in age across its surface while not showing any sign of surface compositional variation," says Fabrizio Capaccioni, INAF, Rome, Italy.
This is just the start of the mystery. Source: ESA |






There are also boulders strewn across the surface: some are 300–400m across, or about half the size of Ayers Rock, in Australia.