News on Minor Planets
- Dawn reveals asteroid Vesta’s role in solar system history
- Analysis of Vesta's chemistry
- Mountain on Vesta produces terrestial meteorites
- Comlpex molecules on Plutos surface
- Is Vesta really a small Earthlike planet?
- Dawn spirals to lovest orbity around Vesta
- Pluto's minor-planetary twin Eris
- Giant mountain on Vesta
- New images and video of Vesta
- Discovery of ice and possibly methane on distant dwarf-planet
- New moon discovered around Pluto
- Neptune celebrates its 1-year anniversary
- A day on a giant gas-planet
- Astronomers observe rare occultation of planet and its moon
- SOFIA observes challenging Pluto occultation
- First sights of asteroid Vesta
- The dwarf planet Haumea
- First glimpse of Vesta
- Pluto extensive atmosphere
- Scientists suggests a large planet may be hiding in our solar outskirts
- Minor-planet Eris has more atmosphere than Pluto
- Tritons summersky full of CO and Methane
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Mountain on Vesta produces terrestial meteorites
Wednesday, 04 January 2012 01:36
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| Solar system - Minor planets |
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Meteorites found on Earthcan often be identified as originated from Mars, the Moon or larger asteroids like Vesta. Some of these Vesta meteorites have long pussled astronomers, as they seem to be of newer date. But as the Dawn spacecraft found a big mountain on Vesta, they could actually cone from this the impact that created this specific impact-vulcano When NASA's Dawn spacecraft entered orbit around giant asteroid Vesta in July, scientists fully expected the probe to reveal some surprising sights. But no one expected a 21km high mountain, 2½x higher than Mount Everest, to be one of them. The existence of this towering peak could solve a longstanding mystery: How did so many pieces of Vesta end up right here on our own planet? For many years, researchers have been collecting Vesta meteorites from "fall sites" around the world. The rocks' chemical fingerprints leave little doubt that they came from the giant asteroid. Earth has been peppered by so many fragments of Vesta, that people have actually witnessed fireballs caused by the meteoroids tearing through our atmosphere. Recent examples include falls near the African village of Bilanga Yanga in October 1999 and outside Millbillillie, Australia, in October 1960. Russell believes the mountain was created by a 'big bad impact' with a smaller body; material displaced in the smashup rebounded and expanded upward to form a towering peak. The same tremendous collision that created the mountain might have hurled splinters of Vesta toward Earth. "Some of the meteorites in our museums and labs," he says, "could be fragments of Vesta formed in the impact -- pieces of the same stuff the mountain itself is made of." "In this way we can figure out the approximate age of the mountain's surface. Using radioactive dating, we can also tell when the meteorites were 'liberated' from Vesta. A match between those dates would be compelling evidence of a meteorite-mountain connection."
Source: NASA |





