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Earth encounters as the origin of fresh surfaces on near-Earth asteroids. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Telescopic observations show that asteroids often appear redder than meteorites due to a process called 'space weathering', which alters their surfaces in under a million years.
  • 'Unweathered' asteroids, with spectra similar to ordinary chondrite meteorites, are primarily found in regions crossing the orbits of Mars and Earth, suggesting they have undergone recent planetary encounters.
  • Research indicates that these 'Q-type' asteroids have experienced close orbital intersections within the last 500,000 years, with tidal stress being the likely cause of their fresh surfaces, helping to explain the color differences observed between asteroids and meteorites.

Article Abstract

Telescopic measurements of asteroids' colours rarely match laboratory reflectance spectra of meteorites owing to a 'space weathering' process that rapidly reddens asteroid surfaces in less than 10(6) years. 'Unweathered' asteroids (those having spectra matching the most commonly falling ordinary chondrite meteorites), however, are seen among small bodies the orbits of which cross inside Mars and the Earth. Various explanations have been proposed for the origin of these fresh surface colours, ranging from collisions to planetary encounters. Less reddened asteroids seem to cross most deeply into the terrestrial planet region, strengthening the evidence for the planetary-encounter theory, but encounter details within 10(6) years remain to be shown. Here we report that asteroids displaying unweathered spectra (so-called 'Q-types') have experienced orbital intersections closer than the Earth-Moon distance within the past 5 x 10(5) years. These Q-type asteroids are not currently found among asteroids showing no evidence of recent close planetary encounters. Our results substantiate previous work: tidal stress, strong enough to disturb and expose unweathered surface grains, is the most likely dominant short-term asteroid resurfacing process. Although the seismology details are yet to be worked out, the identification of rapid physical processes that can produce both fresh and weathered asteroid surfaces resolves the decades-long puzzle of the difference in colour of asteroids and meteorites.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature08709DOI Listing

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