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Computer generated model of asteroid Golevka created with data taken by the Arecibo Observatory. |
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NASA Scientists Use Radar to Detect Asteroid ForceDecember 5, 2003
NASA scientists have for the first time detected a tiny but
theoretically important force acting on asteroids by
measuring an extremely subtle change in a near-Earth
asteroids orbital path. This force, called the Yarkovsky
Effect, is produced by the way an asteroid absorbs energy
from the sun and re-radiates it into space as heat. The
research will impact how scientists understand and track
asteroids in the future.
Asteroid 6489 "Golevka" is relatively inconspicuous by near-
Earth asteroid standards. It is only one half-kilometer (.33
mile) across, although it weighs in at about 210 billion
kilograms (460 billion pounds). But as unremarkable as
Golevka is on a celestial scale it is also relatively well
characterized, having been observed via radar in 1991, 1995,
1999 and this past May. An international team of
astronomers, including researchers from NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., have used this
comprehensive data set to make a detailed analysis of the
asteroids orbital path. The team's report appears in the
December 5 issue of "Science."
"For the first time we have proven that asteroids can
literally propel themselves through space, albeit very
slowly," said Dr. Steven Chesley, a scientist at NASAs Jet
Propulsion Laboratory and leader of the study.
The idea behind the Yarkovsky Effect is the simple notion
that an asteroids surface is heated by the sun during the
day and then cools off during the night. Because of this the
asteroid tends to emit more heat from its afternoon side,
just as the evening twilight on Earth is warmer than the
morning twilight. This unbalanced thermal radiation produces
a tiny acceleration that has until now gone unmeasured.
"The amount of force exerted by the Yarkovsky Effect, about
an ounce in the case of Golevka, is incredibly small,
especially considering the asteroids overall mass," said
Chesley. "But over the 12 years that Golevka has been
observed, that small force has caused a shift of 15
kilometers (9.4 miles). Apply that same force over tens of
millions of years and it can have a huge effect on an
asteroids orbit. Asteroids that orbit the Sun between Mars
and Jupiter can actually become near-Earth asteroids."
The Yarkovsky Effect has become an essential tool for
understanding several aspects of asteroid dynamics.
Theoreticians have used it to explain such phenomena as the
rate of asteroid transport from the main belt to the inner
solar system, the ages of meteorite samples, and the
characteristics of so-called "asteroid families" that are
formed when a larger asteroid is disrupted by collision. And
yet, despite its profound theoretical significance, the
force has never been detected, much less measured, for any
asteroid until now.
"Once a near-Earth asteroid is discovered, radar is the most
powerful astronomical technique for measuring its physical
characteristics and determining its exact orbit," said Dr.
Steven Ostro, a JPL scientist and a contributor to the
paper. "To give you an idea of just how powerful our radar
observation was like pinpointing to within a half inch the
distance of a basketball in New York using a softball-sized
radar dish in Los Angeles."
To obtain their landmark findings, the scientists utilized
an advanced model of the Yarkovsky Effect developed by Dr.
David Vokrouhlický of Charles University, Prague.
Vokrouhlický led a 2000 study that predicted the possibility
of detecting the subtle force acting on Golevka during its
2003 approach to Earth.
"We predicted that the acceleration should be detectable,
but we were not at all certain how strong it would be," said
Vokrouhlický. "With the radar data we have been able to
answer that question."
Using the measurement of the Yarkovsky acceleration the team
has for the first time determined the mass and density of a
small solitary asteroid using ground-based observations.
This opens up a whole new avenue of study for near-Earth
asteroids, and it is only a matter of time before many more
asteroids are "weighed" in this manner.
In addition to Chesley, Ostro and Vokrouhlický, authors of
the report include Jon Giorgini, Dr. Alan Chamberlin and Dr.
Lance Benner of JPL; David Èapek, Charles University,
Prague, Dr. Michael Nolan, Arecibo Observatory, Puerto Rico,
Dr. Jean-Luc Margot, University of California, Los Angeles,
and Alice Hine, Arecibo Observatory, Puerto Rico.
Arecibo Observatory is operated by Cornell University under
a cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation
and with support from NASA. NASAs Office of Space Science,
Washington, DC supported the radar observations. JPL is
managed for NASA by the California Institute of Technology
in Pasdena.
More information about NASA's planetary missions,
astronomical observations, and laboratory measurements are
available on the Internet at: http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/
Information about NASA programs is available on the Internet
at: www.nasa.gov
JPL is managed for NASA by the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena