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MINOR PLANET NEWS - MARCH 2000


This page contains recent press releases concerning discoveries and information about minor planets (asteroids) and related issues. The page will updated as and when time permits.


NEAR Shoemaker Moving In for a Better Look at Eros

http://near.jhuapl.edu/news/flash/00mar31_1.html

The true nature of Eros becomes a bit clearer -- literally -- as NEAR Shoemaker moves into a lower orbit this weekend. Shortly after 9 p.m. (EST) on Saturday, April 1, the spacecraft will fire its thrusters for about 40 seconds and begin gradually descending into position to start a 62-mile (100-kilometer) orbit on April 11.

Since March 3, NEAR Shoemaker has been in a nearly circular orbit some 127 miles (205 kilometers) from the center of Eros. NEAR team members say halving the spacecraft's distance to the rotating space rock will yield sharper images of the abundant geological features on the asteroid's surface, giving them a chance to learn more about the relationship between the many ridges, grooves and craters.

Earlier than expected, the team is also gathering information on the asteroid's elemental makeup. With the help of three solar flares on March 22 and 23, the spacecraft's X-Ray/Gamma Ray Spectrometer (XGRS) picked up additional fluorescent "signatures" of magnesium, aluminum, silicon, calcium and iron on the Eros surface. The readings were similar to those the XGRS detected during a solar flare on March 2 -- from four times the distance the instrument is designed to operate.

"From that distance, the readings verify that the instrument has the sensitivity we need," says Dr. Jacob Trombka, XGRS instrument team leader from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. "They continue to show us that the calibration is on target and the instrument is working as it should."

NEAR Shoemaker is about 135 million miles (218 million kilometers) from Earth, moving 3 miles an hour around Eros. The spacecraft is six weeks into its historic, yearlong mission to study the asteroid.

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NEAR Movies of EROS Available

Our NEAR spacecraft has produced a couple of short movies of asteroid Eros. See the NEAR Image of the Day entries for March 23 and 24 at http://near.jhuapl.edu/iod/archive.html. Tumblin' spud!

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NEAR Renamed for Scientist

The first spacecraft to orbit an asteroid has been renamed to honor geologist Eugene M. Shoemaker. The Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) spacecraft, which has been circling the asteroid 433 Eros since February 14th, will now be known as NEAR Shoemaker. The announcement was made on March 14th at the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in Houston, Texas, by Carl B. Pilcher, Director of Solar System Exploration at NASA Headquarters. "Gene Shoemaker was an inspirational, charismatic pioneer in the field of interplanetary science," Pilcher explained. "It is a fitting tribute that we place his name on the spacecraft whose mission will expand on all he taught us about asteroids, comets, and the origins of our solar system."

NEAR Shoemaker currently orbits Eros about 200 kilometers from its center, taking 9 days to complete one revolution (Eros itself rotates every 5.27 hours). The orbit will be shrunk to 100-km radius on April 1st, and soon thereafter NEAR should be circling at just 50 km -- close enough to use its magnetometer and X-ray/gamma-ray spectrometers.

At the conference, Donald K. Yeomans (Jet Propulsion Laboratory) reported that Eros's mass has been determined to be 6.7 x 10^18 grams. This yields a bulk density of 2.7 grams per cubic centimeter. This value could change somewhat once researchers refine the shape of the 33-by-13-km body and accurately determine the asteroid's volume.

Visit the NEAR website at: http://www.jhuapl.edu/

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Asteroid devastation could even be worse than feared
By David Stauth

CORVALLIS, Ore. -- Researchers say in a new report that if a huge asteroid were to hit the Earth, the catastrophic destruction it causes, and even the "impact winter" that follows, might only be a prelude to a different, but very deadly phase that starts later on. They're calling it, "ultraviolet spring."

In an analysis of the secondary ecological repercussions of a major asteroid impact, scientists from Oregon State University and the British Antarctic Survey have outlined some of the residual effects of ozone depletion, acid rain and increased levels of harmful ultraviolet radiation. The results were just published in the journal Ecology Letters.

The findings are frightening. As a number of popular movies have illustrated in recent years, a big asteroid or comet impact would in fact produce enormous devastation, huge tidal waves, and a global dust cloud that would block the sun and choke the planet in icy, winter-like conditions for months. Many experts believe such conditions existed on Earth following an impact around the Cretaceous-Tertiary, or K-T boundary, when there was a massive extinction of many animals, including the dinosaurs.

That's pretty bad. But according to Andrew Blaustein, a professor of zoology at Oregon State University, there's more to the story.

"Scientists have pretty well documented the immediate destruction of an asteroid impact and even the impact winter which its dust cloud would create," Blaustein said. "But our study suggests that's just the beginning of the ecological disaster, not the end of it."

Blaustein and colleague Charles Cockell examined an asteroid impact of a magnitude similar to the one that occurred around the K-T boundary, which is believed to have hit off the Yucatan Peninsula with a force of almost one trillion megatons.

The immediate results would be catastrophic destruction and an impact winter, with widespread death of plants and the large terrestrial animals -- including humans -- that most directly depend on those plants for food. That's the beginning of an ugly scenario, the researchers say.

As a result of the impact, the atmosphere would become loaded with nitric oxide, causing massive amounts of acid rain. As they become acidified, the lakes and rivers would have reduced amounts of dissolved organic carbons, which would allow much greater penetration of ultraviolet light.

At first, of course, the ultraviolet rays would be blocked by the dust cloud, which sets the stage for a greater disaster later on. Many animals depend on some exposure to ultraviolet light to keep operational their biological protective mechanisms against it -- without any such light, those protective mechanisms would be eroded or lost.

During the extended winter, animals across the biological spectrum would become weaker, starved and more vulnerable. Many would die. Then comes ultraviolet spring, shining down on surviving plants and animals that have lost their resistance to ultraviolet radiation and penetrating more deeply, with greater intensity, into shallow waters than it ever has before.

"By our calculations, the dust cloud would shield the Earth from ultraviolet light for an extended period, with it taking about 390 days after impact before enough dust settled that there would be an ultraviolet level equal to before the impact. After that, the ozone depletion would cause levels of ultraviolet radiation to at least double, about 600 days after impact."

According to their study, these factors would lead to ultraviolet-related DNA damage about 1,000 times higher than normal, and general ultraviolet damage to plants about 500 times higher than normal. Ultraviolet radiation can cause mutations, cancer, and cataracts. It can kill plants or slow their growth, suppressing the photosynthesis which forms the base of the world's food chain.

Smaller asteroid impacts, which have happened far more frequently in Earth's history, theoretically might cause similar or even worse problems with ultraviolet exposure, the researchers say. The ozone depletion would be less, but there would also be less of a protective dust cloud.

"Part of what we're trying to stress here is that with an asteroid collision, there will be many synergistic effects on the environment that go far beyond the initial impact," said Cockell, a researcher with the British Antarctic Survey who did some of this analysis while formerly working with NASA. "Effects such as acid rain, fires, the dust clouds, cold temperatures, ozone depletion and ultraviolet radiation could all build upon each other."

During the K-T event, the scientists said, many of the animals may actually have been spared most of the ultraviolet spring they envision. That impact, oddly enough, hit a portion of the Earth's crust that was rich in anhydrite rocks. This produced a 12-year sulfate haze that blocked much of the ultraviolet radiation. But it was a lucky shot -- that type of rock covers less than 1 percent of the Earth's surface.

So when the next "big one" comes, the scientists said, the ecological repercussions may be more savage than any of those known in Earth's long history. The collision will be devastating, the "impact winter" deadly.

But it will be the ultraviolet spring that helps finish off the survivors.

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Fast-Spinning Asteroid Studied

[From Fall 1999/Number 87 issue of Lunar and Planetary Information, http://cass.jsc.nasa.gov/publications/newsletters/lpib/lpib87/lpib87.pdf]

The Lunar & Planetary Homepage: http://cass.jsc.nasa.gov/lpi.html

Spinning faster than any object ever observed in the solar system, a lumpy, water-rich sphere known as 1998 KY26, measuring about the diameter of a baseball diamond, is rotating so swiftly that its day ends almost as soon as it begins, NASA scientists report.

Asteroid 1998 KY26, where the Sun rises or sets every five minutes, was observed June 2­8, 1998, shortly after it was discovered and as it passed 800,000 kilometers (half a million miles) from Earth, or about twice the distance between Earth and the Moon. Publishing their findings in a recent issue of Science magazine, Dr. Steven J. Ostro of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, and an international team of astronomers used a radar telescope in California and optical telescopes in the Czech Republic, Hawai'i, Arizona, and California to image the 30-meter, water-rich ball as it twirled through space. It is the smallest solar system object ever studied in detail.

"Enormous numbers of objects this small are thought to exist very close to Earth, but this is the first time we've been able to study one in detail. Ironically, this asteroid is smaller than the radar instruments we used to observe it," Ostro said.

The asteroid's rotation period was calculated at just 10.7 minutes, compared to 24 hours for Earth and at least several hours for the approximately 1000 asteroids measured to date. In addition, the minerals in 1998 KY26 probably contain about a million gallons of water, enough to fill two or three olympic-sized swimming pools, Ostro said.

"This asteroid is quite literally an oasis for future space explorers," he said. "Its optical and radar properties suggest a composition like carbonaceous chondrite meteorites, which contain complex organic compounds that have been shown to have nutrient value. These could be used as soil to grow food for future human outposts. And among the 25,000 or so asteroids with very reliably known orbits, 1998 KY26 is in an orbit that makes it the most accessible to a spacecraft."

The solar system is thought to contain about 10 million asteroids this small in orbits that cross Earth's, and about 1 billion in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. However, only a few dozen of these tiny asteroids have ever been found and, until now, hardly anything was known about the nature of these objects.

Ostro and his colleagues used the 70-meter-diameter Goldstone, California, antenna of NASA's Deep Space Network to transmit radar signals continuously to the asteroid and turned a 4-meter-diameter antenna on it to collect echoes bouncing back from the object.

1998 KY26's color and radar reflectivity showed similarities to carbonaceous chondrites, primordial meteorites that formed during the origin of the solar system and are unlike any rocks formed on Earth. They contain complex organic compounds as well as 10­20% water. Some carbonaceous chondrites contain amino acids and nucleic acids, which are the building blocks of proteins and DNA, and hence are of interest to scientists trying to unravel the origins of life.

A second team of astronomers used optical telescopes to track 1998 KY26, which was discovered by the University of Arizona's Spacewatch telescope, the world's first instrument dedicated to searching for near-Earth asteroids. Dr. Petr Pravec of the Czech Republic's Academy of Sciences said collisions likely gave 1998 KY26 its rapid spin.

But one way or another, Pravec said, this object's 10.7-minute "day" is the shortest of any known object in the solar system.

"The motion of the sky would be 135 times faster than it is on Earth," he said. "Sunrises and sunsets take about two minutes on Earth, but on 1998 KY26, they would take less than one second. You'd see a sunrise or sunset every five minutes."

Dr. Scott Hudson of Washington State University in Pullman found the asteroid's shape particularly surprising. Asteroids thousands of times larger have spherical shapes as a result of their large masses and strong gravitational fields, he said. 1998 KY26 is very unusual, however, because gravity and mass play no significant role in its shape. Instead, the spheroid shape is the result of collisions with other asteroids.

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Cassini Glimpses Minor Planet

Cruising toward its arrival at Jupiter next December, the Cassini spacecraft passed in the vicinity of minor planet 2685 Masursky on January 23rd and took a series of snapshots from 1.6 million kilometers away. According to Carolyn Porco, who heads Cassini's imaging team, the little asteroid has a diameter of about 15 to 20 km. Although its disk was not resolved, Masursky's reflectivity suggests that it may not be an S-type asteroid, as had been assumed based on its orbital association with the Eunomia family of S-type asteroids. This object was named for renowned planetary geologist Harold Masursky (1923-90). "It may be only a dot," says Porco, "but it's a very special dot to us!"

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NEAR - Wanted: A Few Good Solar Flares

Wanted: A Few Good Solar Flares - A 15-second engine burn on March 3 will move NEAR into a tighter orbit around Eros. With a little help from the Sun, the satellite could get its first readings of the Eros's composition.

March 3, 2000 -- A 15-second engine burn at 1 p.m. EST on March 3 will nudge NASA's Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) spacecraft into a 200-kilometer (124-mile) orbit around Eros, giving the probe its best scientific look at the asteroid so far.

"We expect to resolve a lot of the features that we've only seen glimpses of," says Louise Prockter, a member of NEAR's imaging team.

With a little help from the Sun, the satellite could also get its first readings of the asteroid's elements. The X-Ray Spectrometer detects fluorescence from substances that react to cosmic x-rays. X-rays from solar flares that illuminate the asteroid will cause surface elements such as magnesium, aluminum, and silicon to glow with their own characteristic X-ray signature that the spectrometer can record and decipher.

"A lot depends on solar activity," says Ralph McNutt, X-Ray/Gamma Ray Spectrometer instrument scientist. "If there is a strong solar X-ray event, the instrument will get a good measurement."

McNutt's wish is likely to come true. The face of the Sun is currently peppered with active sunspot groups. Three of them have complex magnetic field structures that make significant eruptions almost certain. In the past 24 hours alone the NOAA GOES-8 satellite has recorded four intense X-ray emitting flares. As NEAR descends toward Eros, the space weather environment looks just right for some good X-ray fluorescence measurements.

The craft's radio science equipment will also take advantage of the closer orbit to get a better reading of the asteroid's gravity field. This will help scientists piece together the internal structure of the asteroid and allow ground controllers to manage NEAR's tricky orbit around the low-mass space rock.

Pinging all Space Rocks

On February 29, the NEAR Laser Rangefinder (NLR) detected the first laser returns from Eros at a range of 290 km. NLR was designed to operate at 50 km range, and its successful detection of Eros at 290 km bodes well for the future, say mission scientists.

Left: The first laser rangefinder observations were obtained during the turn-on of the instrument while the NEAR spacecraft orbited Eros on February 28-29, 2000. The returns from this calibration pass bounced off a short segment of the surface, close to the edge of a giant gouge.

"The laser rangefinder data will give us a three-dimensional view of the asteroid surface, nicely complementing the information from images," says Andy Cheng, the NEAR Project Scientist at Johns Hopkins University. "This is because imagers record the distribution of brightness as a function of angles perpendicular to the line-of-sight, whereas the laser rangefinder measures distance to the surface along the line-of-sight. The combination of the two data sets will be powerful, as we hope it will enable us to probe into shadowed regions (because the laser does not depend on solar illumination), and to distinguish between effects of albedo [reflectivity] variations and effects of height variations."

Moving 3 miles an hour relative to Eros, NEAR will circle the rotating space rock three full times during the upcoming 200 km (124 mile) orbit. NEAR operates at this range until April 1, when another short engine burn will gradually move it into a 100-kilometer (60-mile) orbit. The asteroid and spacecraft are about 245 million kilometers (152 million miles) from Earth.

The NEAR team will analyze and present its findings from the orbit over the next several months, including a potential first look at the data during a March 13 press briefing at the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in Houston.

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