WASHINGTON (Reuters) — A little asteroid called Dinkinesh — visited last November by NASA’s Lucy spacecraft — has a surprisingly dynamic history, according to scientists, along with its moonlet Selam that is comprised of two bodies that gently melded into one.
Dinkinesh
and Selam are the smallest asteroids from our solar system’s main asteroid
belt, located between the planets Mars and Jupiter, ever seen up close by a
spacecraft. Lucy observed ridges, trough structures and other characteristics on
Dinkinesh that hint at a complicated past for the asteroid and its companion,
the researchers said on May 29.
Asteroids
are primordial remnants from the solar system’s early stages, offering clues
about how Earth and other planets formed roughly 4.5 billion years ago.
The
U.S. space agency launched Lucy in 2021 on a 12-year mission to study asteroids
— in particular, Jupiter’s Trojan asteroids, two batches of space rocks that
lead and trail the giant planet as it orbits the sun. On the way, Lucy flew
past Dinkinesh and Selam in the inner edge of the main asteroid belt.
Dinkinesh
has a diameter of 720 meters. Selam is made up of two similarly sized lobes,
one 230 meters wide and the other 210 meters. Selam orbits Dinkinesh once about
every 53 hours at a distance of about 3.1 kilometers.
It
appears, the researchers said, that a big piece of rock broke free sometime in
the past from Dinkinesh, amounting to about a quarter its total size, as the
asteroid spun in its orbit, gouging a trough on its surface and sending debris
into space. Some of this debris, they said, apparently fell back onto
Dinkinesh’s surface as boulders to form a ridge structure, while other material
came together to form Selam.
Selam
is what is called a contact-binary moonlet.
“When
referring to small bodies in the solar system, a contact-binary is when it
appears that a single body is composed of two objects that collided gently
enough not to become disrupted,” said planetary scientist Katherine Kretke of
the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) in Colorado, a coauthor of the study
published in the journal Nature.
“They
are relatively common in the solar system, but Selam was the first time a
contact-binary has been observed orbiting another asteroid,” Kretke said.
Dinkinesh
orbits the sun at about 2.2 times the distance of Earth’s orbit.
“During
their lifetime, small asteroids may shed material, which later ends up forming
a small satellite or satellites. The complex shape of Selam indicates that this
process may occur multiple times,” said SwRI planetary scientist and Lucy
mission deputy principal investigator Simone Marchi, another study coauthor.
Asteroids
are the building blocks of planet formation.
“A
planet like Earth formed by the accumulation of countless small bodies.
Understanding the properties of small asteroids such as Dinkinesh and Selam
helps us to have a better picture of the earliest phases of planet formation,”
Marchi said.
NASA’s
spacecraft was named for the Ethiopian fossil, nicknamed Lucy, of the extinct
human relative Australopithecus. That fossil has provided insight into a
formative stage of the human evolutionary lineage, much as asteroids provide
insight into planetary formation.
Dinkinesh
is the Ethiopian name for the Lucy fossil, meaning “you are marvelous” in the
Amharic language. Selam, the Ethiopian name for another Australopithecus
fossil, means “peace” in Amharic.
Lucy
will next visit the asteroid Donaldjohanson in 2025 in the main asteroid belt,
with 11 asteroids in total on its agenda. The Dinkinesh visit was a late
addition to Lucy’s itinerary.
“Dinkinesh was a test fly-by for the Lucy mission that
allowed us to exercise some of the procedures that will be used later in the
mission when we get to the Trojan asteroids,” Marchi said. “Lucy performed
flawlessly and as planned.”

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