Sunday, October 17, 2021

3307 - VESTA - dwarf planet or an asteroid?

  -  3307   -  VESTA  -  dwarf planet or an asteroid?   Vesta is the second-largest body in the asteroid belt at 500 kilometers across (310 miles). It's big enough to have evolved in the same way as rocky, terrestrial bodies like the Earth, Moon and Mars.


---------------------  3307  -  VESTA  -  dwarf planet or an asteroid?   

-   ‘Vesta’ is helping scientists better understand the earliest era in the formation of our solar system.  Astronomers call it a “dwarf planet“.

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--------------------   See Review 3306 about smaller meteors and asteroids.  This Review is about the bigger ones, but are still too small to be planets.

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-  Data from meteorites derived from Vesta are being used to resolve the "missing mantle problem" and to push back our knowledge of the solar system to just a couple of million years after it began to form. 

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- Vesta is the second-largest body in the asteroid belt at 500 kilometers across (310 miles) is big enough to have evolved in the same way as terrestrial bodies like the Earth, Moon and Mars.

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-  Early on, these were balls of molten rock heated by collisions.  Iron and the “siderophiles“, or 'iron-loving' elements such as rhenium, osmium, iridium, platinum and palladium sank to the center to form a metallic core, leaving the mantle poor in these elements. As the planet cooled, a thin solid crust formed over the mantle. Later, meteorites brought iron and other elements to the crust.

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-  Most of the bulk of a planet like Earth is mantle. But mantle-type rocks are rare among asteroids and meteorites.  Meteorites, have core material,  have a crust, but we don't see mantle.   Planetary scientists have called this the "missing mantle problem."

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-  Precise measurements of oxygen and chromium isotopes allow researchers to identify meteorites NWA12217, 12562 and 12319 as coming from Vesta.  They  describe these three recently discovered meteorites that do include mantle rock, called “ultramafics” that include mineral olivine as a major component. 

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-  Precise analysis of isotopes created a fingerprint that allowed them to identify the meteorites as coming from Vesta, or,  a very similar body.

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-  Because Vesta is so small,  a solid crust formed long before larger bodies like the Earth, moon and Mars.  The siderophile elements that accumulated in its crust and mantle form a record of the very early solar system after core formation. Over time, collisions have broken pieces off Vesta that sometimes fall to Earth as meteorites.

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-    Because Vesta formed very early, it's a good template to look at the entire history of the Solar System.  This pushes us back to two million years after the beginning of solar system formation.

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-  It had been thought that Vesta and the larger inner planets could have got much of their material from the asteroid belt. But a key finding from the study was that the inner planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth and moon, Mars and inner dwarf planets) got most of their mass from colliding and merging with other large, molten bodies early in the solar system. The asteroid belt itself represents the leftover material of planet formation, but did not contribute much to the larger worlds.

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-  Vesta is the second most massive body in the asteroid belt, surpassed only by “Ceres“. The brightest asteroid in the sky, Vesta is occasionally visible from Earth with the naked eye. It is the first of the four largest asteroids (Ceres, Vesta, Pallas and Hygiea) to be visited by a spacecraft. The Dawn mission orbited Vesta in 2011, providing new insights into this rocky world.

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-  A look at history takes us to 1596, while determining the elliptical shape of planetary orbits, Johannes Kepler came to believe that a planet should exist in the gap between Mars and Jupiter. Mathematical calculations by Johann Daniel Titius and Johann Elert Bode in 1772, later known as the Titius-Bode law, seemed to support this prediction. 

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-  In August 1798, a group known as the Celestial Police formed to search for this missing planet. Among these was German astronomer Heinrich Olbers. Olbers discovered the second known asteroid, Pallas. 

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-  In a letter to a fellow astronomer, Olbers put forth the first theory of asteroid origin. He wrote, "Could it be that Ceres and Pallas are just a pair of fragments … of a once greater planet which at one time occupied its proper place between Mars and Jupiter?"

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-  Olbers reasoned that the fragments of such a planet would intersect at the point of the explosion, and again in the orbit directly opposite. He observed these two areas nightly, and on March 29, 1807, discovered Vesta, becoming the first person to discover two asteroids. 

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-  Olbers sent his calculations to mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss, who remarkably computed the orbit of Pallas in only 10 hours. As such, he was given the honor of naming the new body. He chose the name Vesta, goddess of the hearth, and sister to Ceres. 

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-  NASA's Dawn spacecraft obtained an image with its framing camera on July 17, 2011. It was taken from a distance of about 9,500 miles away from Vesta. Each pixel in the image corresponds to roughly 0.88 miles.

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-  Vesta is unique among asteroids in that it has light and dark patches on the surface, much like our Moon. Ground-based observations determined that the asteroid has basaltic regions, meaning that lava once flowed across its surface. It has an irregular shape, roughly that of an oblate spheroid, a somewhat smooshed sphere. 

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-----------------------------  Diameter: 329 miles 

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----------------------------- Mass: 5.886 X 10^20 lbs. 

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-----------------------------  Temperature: 85 to 255 Kelvin (minus 306 to 0 degrees Fahrenheit )

----------------------------- Albedo: 0.4322  (reflects 43%of the light)

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----------------------------- Rotation period: 5.342 hours

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----------------------------- Orbital period: 3.63 years, to orbit the Sun.

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----------------------------- Eccentricity: .0886

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----------------------------- Aphelion: 2.57 AU,  distance from the Sun

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----------------------------- Perihelion: 2.15 AU ( astronomical units)

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----------------------------- Closest approach to Earth: 1.14 AU ( 104 million miles )

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-  When Vesta made a close approach to Earth in 1996, the Hubble Space Telescope mapped its topographic surface and features. This revealed a large crater at the south pole that slices into its interior. The crater averages 460 km in diameter, Vesta itself is only 530 km across. 

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-  This crater cuts an average of 13 km deep into the crust, and most likely formed from an impact in the asteroid's early life. The material ejected from this collision resulted in a number of smaller, Vestoid,  asteroids that orbit near their parent, as well as some of the meteorites that have crashed into Earth.

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-  Unlike most asteroids, the interior of Vesta is differentiated. Like the terrestrial planets, the asteroid has a crust of cooled lava covering a rocky mantle and an iron and nickel core. This lends credence to the argument for naming Vesta as a “protoplanet“, rather than as an “asteroid“.

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-  Vesta's core accreted rapidly within the first 10 million years after the formation of the solar system. The basaltic crust of Vesta also formed quickly, over the course of a few million years. 

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- Volcanic eruptions on the surface stemmed from the mantle, lasting anywhere from 8 to 60 hours. The lava flows themselves ranged from a few hundred meters to several kilometers, with a thickness between 5 to 20 meters. The lava itself cooled rapidly, only to be buried again by more lava until the crust was complete. 

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- Dawn's gravity put its core at about 18 percent of Vesta's mass, or proportionally about two-thirds as massive as Earth's core.

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-  In fact, if it weren't for Jupiter, Vesta could have had a good chance at becoming a planet.  In the asteroid belt, Jupiter basically stirred things up so much that they weren't able to easily accrete with one another.  The velocities in the asteroid belt were really high, and the higher the velocity is, the harder it is for things to merge together under their own gravity.

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-  In 1960, a fireball streaking through the sky over Millbillillie, Australia, announced the arrival of a piece of Vesta on Earth. Composed almost entirely of pyroxene, a mineral found in lava flows, the meteorite bears the same spectral signals as Vesta.

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-  NASA's Dawn spacecraft, which visited the asteroid in 2012, discovered that the rocky body had a surprising amount of hydrogen on its surface. It also found bright, reflective regions that may have been left over from its birth.  This bright material originates from Vesta and has undergone little change since the formation of Vesta over 4 billion years ago.

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-  A massive mountain towers over Vesta's southern pole. The enormous mountain reaches up over 65,000 feet in height, making it nearly as tall as Olympus Mons, which is the largest mountain and volcano in the solar system. Olympus Mons soars about 15 miles above the surface of Mars.

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-   Liquid water once flowed across the asteroid. Images captured by the Dawn spacecraft revealed curved gullies and fan-shaped deposits within eight different Vesta impact craters. All eight of the craters are thought to have formed within the last few hundred million years, fairly recent in the lifetime of the 4.5-billion-year-old asteroid.

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-   Nobody expected to find evidence of water on Vesta. The surface is very cold and there is no atmosphere, so any water on the surface evaporates.

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-  Scared features were created by debris flows, as opposed to pure-water rivers or streams, sculpted the Vesta gullies.  Meteorites bombarding the asteroid melted ice deposits beneath the surface, sending liquid water and small rocky particles flowing down the crater walls. Such activity suggests the presence of ice buried beneath the surface.

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-    Ice was likely responsible for modifying Vesta's surface.   The smooth patches of terrain on the asteroid frequently possessed high concentrations of hydrogen, which is often seen when solar radiation breaks down water molecules.   Modifications of the surface by melting of buried ice could be responsible for smoothing those areas.   Buried ice could have been brought to the surface after an impact, which caused heated ice to melt and travel up through the fractures to the surface.

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-   Dawn also observed signs of hydrated minerals (minerals containing water molecules) on Vesta's surface, which could also hint at the presence of buried ice. The hydrated materials were associated with older terrains, and could have been delivered by impacts of material from farther out in the solar system.

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-  A low-altitude map of Vesta revealed a rich geology. The steep slopes found on the asteroid, combined with its high gravity, paves the way for rocks to roll downward, exposing other material. Dawn revealed a variety of mineral, including some bright and dark materials that could relate to potential buried ice.

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-  Vesta's unique composition means that it is responsible for an entire group of meteorites. The “HED” meteorites, made up of ‘howardites, eucrites and diogenites‘, tell the story of Vesta's early life.

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-   Eucrites form from hardened lava, while diogenites come from beneath the surface. Howardites are a combination of the two, formed when a large impact mixed the two sections together. 

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-  Vesta has been suspected as being the source of the HED meteorites since 1970. Dawn's mapping spectrometer verified that proposition.  They think the HEDs came from an impact basin named Rheasilvia, after an ancient Roman vestal virgin priestess. At 310 miles in diameter, Rheasilvia is nearly as large as Vesta itself. It most likely formed from a collision that stripped away most of the southern hemisphere's crust, revealing the asteroid's interior.

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-  Parallel troughs may be another sign of the enormous impact.   The presence of those troughs suggests serious damage to the asteroid's interior.

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-  If the orbit of Vesta lies beyond Mars, how did pieces of it manage to arrive on Earth? The fragments of Vesta pass Jupiter once every three orbits around the sun, allowing the gravity of the largest planet to affect them. Such tugging could have shifted the fragments enough to cause their eventual impact with Earth.  As a result, Vesta is one of three bodies from which scientists have samples. The other two are the Moon and Mars.

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-  In September 2007, NASA launched the Dawn mission, which is unique in that it was the first craft to enter orbit around one solar system body, then proceed to a second. Dawn entered orbit around Vesta in July 2011. After studying the asteroid for a year, it left Vesta encountered Ceres in March 2015. 

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-  NASA's Dawn mission is to study the characteristics of the early solar system by analyzing the two asteroids, which are very different. Ceres is wet, with seasonal polar caps, and may have a thin atmosphere. Vesta, on the other hand, is dry and rocky. Studying the unique spectral signatures in its rocky crust will expand our knowledge of our own planet, as well as Mars and Mercury.

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-  Given their size, the two are actually regarded as protoplanets, or small planets. The gravitational pull of Jupiter disrupted their formation. Without the presence of the gas giant, the two may well have continued to evolve into full-size planets.

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-   We now know that Vesta is the only intact, layered planetary building block surviving from the very earliest days of the solar system  Dawn's study of Vesta allowed for the creation of the best map to date of the asteroid.

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-  In October 2010, the Hubble Space Telescope imaged Vesta again. The resulting data revealed that the asteroid was tilted approximately four degrees more than scientists originally thought. These findings helped NASA to place the spacecraft in the appropriate polar orbit around the asteroid. Dawn requires light from the sun in order to perform its mapping and imaging assignments.

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------------------------------  See Review 3299, October 8, 2021, for more information about  COMETS  -  Vesta and Bern.-Bern.            

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-  October 16, 2021         VESTA  -  dwarf planet or an asteroid?         3307                                                                                                                                                   

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--------------------- ---  Sunday, October 17, 2021  ---------------------------






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