New Method Identifies Families of Asteroids with Greater Precision
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follows an article published day (09/04) in the english website of the Agência
FAPESP highlighting that New Method identifies Families
of Asteroids with greater precision.
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Falcão
Article
New Method Identifies Families of
Asteroids with
Greater Precision
By Elton Alisson
September 4, 2013
(illustration:
NASA)
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| Developed by an international group led by Brazilian researchers, the innovation combines orbital position, color and emitted light to identify members of a family of asteroids |
Agência FAPESP – An international group of astronomists, led
by researchers of the Orbital Dynamics and Planetology Group in the Engineering
School of the Universidade Estadual Paulista (Guaratinguetá campus) have
developed a new method to identify families of asteroids.
The method, the result of a FAPESP-funded research project, was presented during a meeting of the
Dynamic Astronomy Division of the American Astronomy Society (AAS) held May
5–9, 2013, in Paraty, Rio de Janeiro and was described in an article published
in the July edition of the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
“The new method allows for identification of members of a family of
asteroids with greater precision than before,” says Valério Carruba, a
professor at Unesp-Guaratinguetá and the author of the study.
The families of asteroids are formed by parts of larger asteroids that
collide, breaking into fragments of different sizes. After being ejected, these
fragments tend to travel in similar trajectories around the Sun and slowly
distance themselves from each other over time.
Some pieces end up in unstable orbits, which deviate toward dangerous
incursions in the solar system, whereas other pieces become integrated into the
populations of asteroids near Earth.
In addition to identifying families of asteroids, scientists are also
currently using models based on surveys of rocky objects that are close to
large-scale asteroids, given a certain distance between them, according to
Carruba.
The problem with these methods, according to the researcher, is that
they only take into account the so-called “proper elements” or the orbital
position of the rocky objects.
They do not take into account other important features that could be
used to identify and classify them as members of a family of asteroids. Among
these features are colors and the amount of light they reflect – the geometric
albedo – because asteroids of the same family have the same color in visible
light and reflect similar amounts of light.
As a result, many objects currently identified as members of families of
existing asteroids are in reality interlopers that entered or previously
occupied the same orbital region.
In collaboration with colleagues from the National Institute of Space
Research in Rio de Janeiro, the Southwest Research Institute in the United
States, and University Pierre & Marie Curie and the Paris Observatory
(SYRTE), both in France, Carruba developed a method that combines orbital
position, colors and geometric albedo to identify families of asteroids.
With the new method, according to Carruba, it is possible to
significantly reduce the probability of classifying intrusive objects as
members of certain families.
“The new method has high efficiency in identifying objects that have a
high probability of being parts of real families of asteroids because they can
delimit the number of interlopers. This improves the identification of the
orbital limits occupied for each group,” he explains.
Data From Space Missions
According to Carruba, the development of a method to identify families
of asteroids was made possible by data obtained by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
(SDSS) and the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) space missions
conducted by the U. S. National Aeronautics and Space Agency (NASA).
The most ambitious space survey underway, the SDSS mission is comprised
of several telescopes that observe the sky in several bandwidths. Since it was
initiated in 2000, the mission has collected data on more than 200,000 objects,
including asteroids. The objects are detailed in Mobile Object Catalogues
(MOCs), which NASA makes accessible to the public via the internet.
Through these catalogues, the researcher has access to data on the
photometry of asteroids, as well as the color and light they emit in several
bandwidths. The problem is that there are several asteroid spectra that cannot
be identified solely based on photometry because, although they present the
same type of visible spectrum, they have distinct values of geometric albedo.
“Information on the light reflected by asteroids can be used in a
complementary manner to identify an object as belonging to a certain family of
asteroids,” stresses Carruba.
“Until 2002, however, we only had these data for approximately 2,000
objects.”
Beginning in 2011, however, the WISE mission began to make geometric
albedo data for more than 100,000 asteroids available. The telescope utilized
in the mission uses infrared waves to make observations.
The larger an object is, the more heat it emits, and when the size of an
asteroid can be measured, it is possible to determine its reflexive properties.
Therefore, asteroids circling the Sun in similar orbits that were once thought
to belong to a single family could in fact be members of different families.
“Information on the orbital position, colors and geometric albedos of
all asteroids is still not available,” commented Carruba. “However, even with a
reduced number of objects, it is possible to determine the families of
asteroids with greater precision,” he affirms.
Ages of Families
The new method was tested and applied to all known families of asteroids
found in the main asteroid belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter at the
beginning of 2013.
The method will allow scientists to more accurately calculate the ages
of families of asteroids.
According to Carruba, to have a notion of the age of a family of
asteroids, one must have an estimate of the orbital dispersion of its members,
which the new method considers.
“If there is not a good estimate of the dispersion of a family of
asteroids, of the objects that are really part of it and the spectral type of
its members, the age calculation could be wrong. This has very important
implications for our comprehension of the evolutionary process that shape the
main asteroid belt,” says Carruba.
The article A multidomain approach to asteroid families’
identification (doi:10.1093/mnras/stt884), by Carruba et al., can be read
by subscribers at mnras.oxfordjournals.org/content/433/3/2075.abstract?sid=9deb1321-2e70-4bef-a30e-a1a87dd94704.
Source: English WebSite of the Agência FAPESP

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