A contact binary satellite of the asteroid (152830) Dinkinesh
Levison, Harold F.; Marchi, Simone; Noll, Keith S.;
Spencer, John R.; Statler, Thomas S.; Bell, James F.;
Bierhaus, Edward B.; Binzel, Richard; Bottke, William F.;
Britt, Daniel; Brown, Michael E.; Buie, Marc W.; Christensen,
Philip R.; Dello Russo, Neil; Emery, Joshua P.; Grundy, William
M.; Hahn, Matthias; Hamilton, Victoria E.; Howett, Carly;
Kaplan, Hannah; Kretke, Katherine; Lauer, Tod R.; Manzoni,
Claudia; Marschall, Raphael; Martin, Audrey C.; May, Brian
H.; Mottola, Stefano; Olkin, Catherine B.; Pätzold, Martin;
Parker, Joel Wm.; Porter, Simon; Preusker, Frank; Protopapa,
Silvia; Reuter, Dennis C.; Robbins, Stuart J.; Salmon, Julien;
Simon, Amy A.; Stern, S. Alan; Sunshine, Jessica M.; Wong,
Ian; Weaver, Harold A.; Adam, Coralie; Ancheta, Shanti; Andrews,
John; Anwar, Saadat; Barnouin, Olivier S.; Beasley, Matthew;
Berry, Kevin E.; Birath, Emma; Bolin, Bryce; Booco, Mark; Burns,
Rich; Campbell, Pam; Carpenter, Russell; Crombie, Katherine; Effertz,
Mark; Eifert, Emily; Ellis, Caroline; Faiks, Preston; Fischetti,
Joel; Fleming, Paul; Francis, Kristen; Franco, Ray; Freund, Sandy;
Gallagher, Claire; Geeraert, Jeroen; Gobat, Caden; Gorgas, Donovan
; Granat, Chris; Gray, Sheila; Haas, Patrick; Harch, Ann; Hegedus,
Katie; Isabelle, Chris; Jackson, Bill; Jacob, Taylor; Jennings, Sherry
; Kaufmann, David; Keeney, Brian A.; Kennedy, Thomas; Lauffer, Karl;
Lessac-Chenen, Erik; Leonard, Rob; Levine, Andrew; Lunsford, Allen;
Martin, Tim; McAdams, Jim; Mehall, Greg; Merkley, Trevor; Miller,
Graham; Montanaro, Matthew; Montgomery, Anna; Murphy, Graham; Myers,
Maxwell; Nelson, Derek S.; Ocampo, Adriana; Olds, Ryan; Pelgrift,
John Y.; Perkins, Trevor; Pineau, Jon; Poland, Devin; Ramanan,
Vaishnavi; Rose, Debi; Sahr, Eric; Short, Owen; Solanki, Ishita;
Stanbridge, Dale; Sutter, Brian; Talpas, Zachary; Taylor, Howard;
Treiu, Bo; Vermeer, Nate; Vincent, Michael; Wallace, Mike; Weigle,
Gerald; Wibben, Daniel R.; Wiens, Zach; Wilson, John P.; Zhao, Yifan.
Nature, 629, 1015 (2024).
ABSTRACT
Asteroids with diameters less than about 5 km have complex histories
because they are small enough for radiative torques (that is, YORP,
short for the Yarkovsky–O'Keefe–Radzievskii–Paddack effect) to
be a notable factor in their evolution. (152830) Dinkinesh is a small
asteroid orbiting the Sun near the inner edge of the main asteroid belt
with a heliocentric semimajor axis of 2.19 AU; its S-type spectrum
is typical of bodies in this part of the main belt. Here we report
observations by the Lucy spacecraft as it passed within 431 km of
Dinkinesh. Lucy revealed Dinkinesh, which has an effective diameter
of only 720 m, to be unexpectedly complex. Of particular note is the
presence of a prominent longitudinal trough overlain by a substantial
equatorial ridge and the discovery of the first confirmed contact binary
satellite, now named (152830) Dinkinesh I Selam. Selam consists of two
near-equal-sized lobes with diameters of 210 m and 230 m. It orbits
Dinkinesh at a distance of 3.1 km with an orbital period of about 52.7
h and is tidally locked. The dynamical state, angular momentum and
geomorphologic observations of the system lead us to infer that the
ridge and trough of Dinkinesh are probably the result of mass failure
resulting from spin-up by YORP followed by the partial reaccretion of the
shed material. Selam probably accreted from material shed by this event.
Scanned PDF (???k).
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