Did an Asteroid Just Disintegrate Before Our Very Eyes? Yorp.
Did an Asteroid Just Disintegrate Before Our Very Eyes? Yorp.
If you think asteroids are just dead, uninteresting lumps of rocks, you’re very, very wrong. Besides being hugely diverse, capable of wiping out life on Earth, capable of bringing the constituents of life to Earth, and also providing nifty hiding places for the rebel alliance, they also have the disturbing ability to sometimes, well, fly apart. Slowly.
The proof comes in the form of P/2013 R3,
discovered in September 2013. When it was first seen by the Catalina
Sky Survey and Pan-STARRS (which sweep the sky looking for moving
objects) and then again by the huge Keck telescope in Hawaii, it
appeared to be three co-moving objects surround by a cloud of material.
Follow-up observations using the even-sharper eye of Hubble showed this to be more than just a trinary asteroid. It was a swarm of objects, slowly moving apart!
The images show the collection of rocks over time, and you can see
them change position. Some of that is due to real motion, and some due
to the changing perspective in which we see them as both the Earth and
the swarm orbit the Sun. At least 10 objects are seen, the biggest of
which are about 200 meters across. All of them have tails that look
suspiciously like comets … but clearly aren’t.
We know this because the object(s) orbit the Sun in the main asteroid
belt between Mars and Jupiter. Comets don’t usually have orbits like
that. Also, a comet on that orbit would have long since lost all its
volatile material (stuff like ice that can be vaporized by sunlight and
expand away as a gas). The event we’re seeing here can’t have started
too long ago, and we’ve caught it while it’s still happening.
The first thing you might think of is an impact by another asteroid.
We’ve seen that before. But in this case the debris isn’t flying apart
quickly enough; they’re moving at a glacial 1.5 kilometers per
hour—slower than walking speed! An impact strong enough to disrupt an
asteroid should have much faster-moving shrapnel than that. Also,
tracing the motions back, the pieces didn’t all fly off at the same
time, so it wasn’t a single, catastrophic event that started them on
their way.
More likely, what we’re seeing here is the final stages of the YORP effect.
This is an incredible slow and gentle process where sunlight heats up
one side of a rotating, lumpy object. The object re-radiates that heat
away as infrared light, which has a teeny tiny amount of momentum.
Although this is a quantum effect, and very small, over time this can
act to speed up the rotation of the rock and get it spinning at a
substantial clip. We’ve actually seen the effects of this before, on an
asteroid called P/2010 A2 (LINEAR) and another recently observed one called P/2013 P5, which sprouted six different comet-like tails! (Note the designation P for all these objects; that stands for “periodic comet,”
because the naming convention dictates that anything that sends out
material like this has cometary properties; I think this makes sense up
to a point but is confusing in the long run. But then, comets and asteroids are very similar, so it’s the nature of nature to blur the lines between categories.)
In those other cases, what probably happened is that loose material
on the surfaces of those objects got flung off when the parent body
started spinning so rapidly that the centrifugal force overcame that of gravity. In this case, though, the main body of the asteroid itself broke apart!
This means the parent body couldn’t have been a solid rock, or else
it would have been a lot sturdier. Instead, it was likely what
astronomers call a rubble pile.
Over time, a solid asteroid suffers myriads of minor collisions with
smaller asteroids. These may not be sufficient to destroy it, but they
may be enough to fragment it, creating deep cracks throughout. Instead
of a solid piece, the asteroid is more like a big bag of broken glass,
held together only by the cumulative gravity of all the pieces.
But at some point, the YORP effect spins it up enough that the meager
gravity of the small component rocks isn’t enough to keep it together.
The individual pieces eventually move apart. The expected velocity would
be low, since the YORP process is gradual, and when it finally
overcomes gravity the speed of the pieces won’t be terribly fast.
And that’s just what we’re seeing here, along with general detritus
and debris flying off as well (probably stuff that was between the other
pieces, inside the original asteroid). As far as I can tell, this is
the very first time we’ve seen the YORP effect totally disrupt an
asteroid, which is pretty dang cool. In a sense, it’s proof that some
asteroids really are just big rubble piles, as we expected.
Asteroids are amazing. If I had to do it all over again and start my
career over from scratch researching some other topic in astronomy, it
would either be these guys or exoplanets. But the beauty of my career
now is that I get to read all about everything. And then I also
get to pass it on to you, so you can see what I see: just how wonderful
and surprising and simply downright cool the Universe really is.
Labels: Astronomy, Nature, Photography, Space
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