Asteroid
Hermes, Lost For 66 Years, is
found to be two objects orbiting each other
www.news.cornell.edu
FOR
RELEASE: Oct. 23, 2003
ARECIBO, P.R. -- An asteroid that
has eluded astronomers for decades turns out to be an unusual pair of objects
traveling together in space, a planetary scientist using the National Science
Foundation's (NSF) Arecibo Observatory radio telescope and his colleagues
report.
The asteroid Hermes was
re-discovered last week after being lost for 66 years.
Now Jean-Luc Margot, a researcher in the Department of Earth and Space
Sciences at the University of California, Los Angeles, has determined that the
asteroid is in fact two objects orbiting each other.
The two objects together would cover an area approximately the size of
Disneyland.
Margot and colleagues are
analyzing new radar measurements from the Arecibo Observatory, Puerto Rico, the
world's largest single-dish radio telescope, operated by the National Astronomy
and Ionosphere Center (NAIC) at Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., for the NSF.
The astronomers are scheduled to obtain additional measurements using the
Arecibo telescope this weekend (Oct. 25-26).
Hermes makes frequent close
approaches to Earth, Venus, Mars, as well as Vesta, the third largest asteroid
in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.
While several other asteroids
have satellites, the other known binaries with trajectories that cross the orbit
of the Earth consist of a large primary asteroid orbited by a much smaller one.
"Hermes is the first
asteroid ever discovered in the near-Earth population where the two components
are essentially equal in size," Margot said.
"It's a very unusual binary, a puzzle. It may have formed when it swung so close to a planet that it
was ripped apart by gravitational forces, but we don't know for sure.
One of our goals is to learn more about the two components and how they
rotate about each other in the hopes that we may be able to deduce how Hermes
became a double asteroid.
"Because the components are
close to each other, they raise appreciable tides in each other and each has
slowed down the other's spin significantly.
They are now likely in a doubly synchronous state, where their spin
period is equal to their orbital period. This
means they constantly present the same face to each other, just like Pluto and
its satellite, Charon."
Hermes, was first observed in
1937 as a fast-moving bright object and then went undetected until last week,
although it had circled the sun almost exactly 31 times since then, said Brian
Marsden, of the Minor Planet Center in Cambridge, Mass.
On Oct. 15, Brian Skiff of the
Lowell Observatory Near-Earth-Object Search sighted a mysterious object; Timothy
Spahr at the Minor Planet Center in Cambridge identified similarities with the
1937 observations, and Steven Chesley and Paul Chodas at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory (JPL) linked the observations to Hermes.
The same day, Margot and his team
proposed to observe the asteroid with the Arecibo Observatory's high-powered
radar system – a proposal that was accepted within hours.
The goals of the proposal were to
measure precisely the distance and velocity of this object, to improve the
knowledge of its trajectory and help trace back its history, to characterize
Hermes' physical properties, and to search for satellites.
Margot and collaborators have
been given five sessions at Arecibo and five sessions at the Goldstone radar
telescope in California to observe Hermes.
Due to the urgent nature of the proposal, Margot observed from his home
computer while his associates, Mike Nolan, Victor Negron, Alice Hine, and Don
Campbell, associate director of NAIC, were at the Arecibo telescope.
Hermes gets as close as 378 000
miles from Earth -- which, in astronomical terms, is quite close, about 1.6
times the distance between Earth and the moon.
Orbits can change appreciably over time due to gravitational influences
of the planets, noted Nolan, an Arecibo Observatory scientist.
Hermes travels on an elliptical
orbit and reaches deep into the inner solar system, crossing Venus' orbit.
The new research has made it possible to extend the time interval over
which the trajectory can be computed reliably, said Jon Giorgini, a senior
engineer at JPL and member of the team.
"As far as impact risk,
there is no cause for worry in our lifetimes," Giorgini said. "Over
hundreds of thousands or millions of years, Hermes could impact the Earth, but
only if it doesn't hit Venus first."
Margot and colleagues described
their observations and data in an International Astronomical Union Circular this
week. Margot's research is funded
by NASA. His co-authors are Nolan, Negron, Hine, Campbell, and Ellen Howell at
NAIC; Lance Benner, Steven Ostro, and Giorgini at JPL; and Marsden at the Minor
Planet Center.