Asteroids, Comets, and Meteors

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wjfox
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Asteroids, Comets, and Meteors

Post by wjfox »

General thread for these rocky/icy objects.

I suggest having a separate one for asteroid mining.

P.S. Here's the difference in terminology. :)


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Re: Asteroids, Comets, and Meteors

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Giant 1km-wide asteroid to pass by Earth, NASA says

Monday 17 January 2022 22:57, UK

A giant asteroid bigger than any building on Earth will pass by our planet on Tuesday, NASA has said.

The asteroid, called 7482 (1994 PC1), measures more than a kilometre in width, at 1,052m (3,451ft).

It is taller than the world's tallest building Burj Khalifi in Dubai, which is 830m (2,723ft) high.

NASA's Asteroid Watch Twitter account assured its followers that the asteroid does not pose a threat to Earth.

It tweeted on 12 January that the asteroid is "very well known and has been studied for decades by our #PlanetaryDefense experts".

https://news.sky.com/story/giant-1km-wi ... s-12518328


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Re: Asteroids, Comets, and Meteors

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Asteroid The Size Of A Grand Piano Strikes Earth And We Knew Exactly Where And When Says NASA

Mar 15, 2022,03:02pm

Some said it was the size of a stepladder. Others said it was more like half the size of a giraffe. Either way, on March 11, 2022 at 21:22 UTC a tiny asteroid struck the ocean 300 miles/470 kilometers off Norway’s Jan Mayen Island.

Did the 6 1/2 feet/2 meters-wide asteroid—about the size of a grand piano and officially called 2022 EB5—slip through the surveillance net?

No, says NASA, who claims its discovery a mere two hours before it struck the Artic Ocean marks the fifth time that any asteroid has been observed before impacting into the atmosphere.

Asteroid 2022 EB5 was observed 14 times during 40 minutes by K. Sarneczky at the Piszkéstető Observatory in northern Hungary, who reported it to the Minor Planet Center.

NASA’s “Scout” impact hazard assessment system then calculated its trajectory, revealed it to be destined to strike Earth’s atmosphere, and thus alerted both the Center for Near Earth Object Studies (CNEOS) and NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/jamiecarte ... 3445193637


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Re: Asteroids, Comets, and Meteors

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:shock: :shock: :shock: :shock:



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Re: Asteroids, Comets, and Meteors

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Hubble Confirms Largest Comet Nucleus Ever Seen
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has determined the size of the largest icy comet nucleus ever seen by astronomers. The estimated diameter is approximately 80 miles across, making it larger than the state of Rhode Island. The nucleus is about 50 times larger than found at the heart of most known comets. Its mass is estimated to be a staggering 500 trillion tons, a hundred thousand times greater than the mass of a typical comet found much closer to the Sun.
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/20 ... -ever-seen
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Re: Asteroids, Comets, and Meteors

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Discovery of 30 exocomets in a young planetary system
https://phys.org/news/2022-04-discovery ... etary.html
by CNRS

For the past 30 years, the star β Pictoris has fascinated astronomers because it enables them to observe a planetary system in the process of formation. It is made up of at least two young planets, and also contains comets, which were detected as early as 1987. These were the first comets ever observed around a star other than the sun.

Now, an international research team headed by Alain Lecavelier des Etangs, CNRS researcher at the Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris (CNRS/Sorbonne Université), has discovered 30 such exocomets and determined the size of their nuclei, which vary between 3 and 14 kilometers in diameter. The scientists were also able to estimate the size distribution of the objects, i.e., the proportion of small comets to large ones. This is the first time this distribution has been measured outside our solar system, and it is strikingly similar to that of comets orbiting the sun. It shows that, just like the comets of the solar system, the exocomets of β Pictoris were shaped by a series of collisions and breakups. This work sheds new light on the origin and evolution of comets in planetary systems. Since a part of Earth's water probably originated in comets, scientists are seeking to understand their impact on the characteristics of planets.
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Re: Asteroids, Comets, and Meteors

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European Space Agency Gives Green Light on its Comet Interceptor Mission
by Laurence Tognetti
June 14, 2022

Introduction:
(Universe Today) Comets, with their long, beautiful, bright tails of ice, are some of the most spectacular sightings in the night sky. This was most apparent when Comet NEOWISE passed by Earth in the summer of 2020, dazzling viewers from all over the planet while being mainly visible in the northern hemisphere. Even though the sky might look the same night after night, comets are a humble reminder that the universe is a very active and beautiful place.

Comets are remnants of a time long past, and by long past we mean a very long past, as they are frozen leftovers from the formation of the solar system. While we are fortunate to see them as dazzling spectacles, they don’t start off this way. Comets are snowballs of frozen gases, rock, and dust orbiting in the edge of the solar system known as the Kuiper Belt where it is hypothesized that billions of comets likely exist. Every so often, one of their orbits brings it close to the Sun where it heats up and spews all that frozen dust and gas into a tail that stretches away from the Sun for millions of miles.

But what about comets that come from outside the solar system? Are they also frozen leftovers from the formation of another solar system like our own? These questions only became greater when our solar system was visited by ‘Oumuamua in 2017, which was the first known interstellar object to visit our solar system. While only visible from Earth for 11 days before it exited our solar system, scientists were able to determine that it was much longer that it was wide, possibly by a factor of five to ten. While this cigar-shaped planetary body is possibly gone forever, questions remain about its origin and composition. But what if were able to visit other interstellar comets that pay a visit to our neck of the galactic woods?

This past week, the European Space Agency (ESA) ‘adopted’ plans for a mission to visit a pristine comet or other interstellar object just starting its journey into the inner solar system and was appropriately named Comet Interceptor…while the mission is led by ESA, it will have support from the Japanese Space Agency (JAXA).
Read more here: https://www.universetoday.com/156282/e ... re-156282

…and here: https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploratio ... struction
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Re: Asteroids, Comets, and Meteors

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Dirt Scooped from Asteroid Ryugu Yields First Discoveries
by Louise Lerner
June 10, 2022

Introduction:
(Futurity) After a six-year journey, a plucky spacecraft called Hayabusa2 zinged back into Earth’s atmosphere in late 2020 and landed deep in the Australian outback. When researchers from the Japanese space agency JAXA opened it, they found its precious payload sealed and intact: a handful of dirt that Hayabusa2 managed to scoop off the surface of a speeding asteroid.

Scientists have now begun to announce the first results from the analysis of this extraordinary sample. What they found suggests that this asteroid is a piece of the same stuff that coalesced into our sun four-and-a-half billion years ago.

“We previously only had a handful of these rocks to study, and all of them were meteorites that fell to Earth and were stored in museums for decades to centuries, which changed their compositions,” says geochemist Nicolas Dauphas, one of the three University of Chicago researchers who worked with a Japan-led team of scientists to analyze the fragments.

“Having pristine samples from outer space is simply incredible. They are witnesses from parts of the solar system that we have not otherwise explored.”

In 2018, Hayabusa2 landed atop a moving asteroid named Ryugu and collected particles from above and below its surface. After spending a year and a half orbiting the asteroid, it returned to Earth with a sealed capsule containing about five grams of dust and rock. Scientists around the world have been eagerly anticipating the unique sample—one that could help redefine our understanding of how planets evolve and how our solar system formed.
Read more here: https://www.futurity.org/ryugu-asteroi ... 751952-2/
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Re: Asteroids, Comets, and Meteors

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Re: Asteroids, Comets, and Meteors

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Study provides new insights about the surface and structure of asteroid Bennu
https://phys.org/news/2022-07-insights- ... bennu.html
by Southwest Research Institute
When NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft collected samples from asteroid Bennu's surface in 2020, forces measured during the interaction provided scientists with a direct test of the poorly understood near-subsurface physical properties of rubble-pile asteroids. Now, a Southwest Research Institute-led study has characterized the layer just below the asteroid's surface as composed of weakly bound rock fragments containing twice the void space as the overall asteroid.

"The low gravity of rubble-pile asteroids such as Bennu weakens its near-subsurface by not compressing the upper layers, minimizing the influence of particle cohesion," said SwRI's Dr. Kevin Walsh, lead author of a paper about this research published in the journal Science Advances. "We conclude that a low-density, weakly bound subsurface layer should be a global property of Bennu, not just localized to the contact point."

Fitting its designation as a "rubble-pile asteroid," Bennu is a spheroidal collection of rock fragments and debris 1,700 feet in diameter and held together by gravity. It is thought to have been formed after a collision involving a larger main-asteroid-belt object. Rocks are scattered across its heavily cratered surface, indicating that it has had a rough-and-tumble existence since being liberated from its much larger parent asteroid some millions or billions of years ago.
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