TY - JOUR
T1 - (596) scheila in outburst
T2 - A probable collision event in the main asteroid belt
AU - Moreno, F.
AU - Licandro, J.
AU - Ortiz, J. L.
AU - Lara, L. M.
AU - Alí-Lagoa, V.
AU - Vaduvescu, O.
AU - Morales, N.
AU - Molina, A.
AU - Lin, Z. Y.
PY - 2011/9/10
Y1 - 2011/9/10
N2 - Images of asteroid (596) Scheila have been acquired at various dates after the discovery of the 2010 outburst. Assuming a short-duration event scenario, as suggested by the quick vanishing of the dust tail brightness with time, and numerically integrating the equation of motion of individual particles ejected from the surface, we have developed a tail model from which we estimate the parameters associated with the geometry of the ejection, the size distribution, and the velocity distribution of the ejected particles, as well as the total mass ejected. We found a weak inverse power-law dependence of ejection velocity versus particle radius, with velocities ranging from 50 to 80ms-1 for particle radii in the range from 5cm to 8 × 10-5cm, respectively. These velocities are very different from those expected from ice sublimation at the asteroid heliocentric distance (∼3 AU) and suggest a collision scenario as a likely cause of the outburst. We found that the ejected particles are distributed in size following a power law of index -3, and, based on the ejecta mass and scaling laws, the impactor size is estimated at 30-90 m in radius, assuming an impact velocity of ∼5kms-1, and the same density (1500kgm-3) for the asteroid as for the projectile. We have inferred an asymmetry in the ejecta along the axis normal to the asteroid orbit plane, a likely indicator of an oblique impact. The impact is estimated to have occurred on November 27, with an accuracy not better than ± 3 days.
AB - Images of asteroid (596) Scheila have been acquired at various dates after the discovery of the 2010 outburst. Assuming a short-duration event scenario, as suggested by the quick vanishing of the dust tail brightness with time, and numerically integrating the equation of motion of individual particles ejected from the surface, we have developed a tail model from which we estimate the parameters associated with the geometry of the ejection, the size distribution, and the velocity distribution of the ejected particles, as well as the total mass ejected. We found a weak inverse power-law dependence of ejection velocity versus particle radius, with velocities ranging from 50 to 80ms-1 for particle radii in the range from 5cm to 8 × 10-5cm, respectively. These velocities are very different from those expected from ice sublimation at the asteroid heliocentric distance (∼3 AU) and suggest a collision scenario as a likely cause of the outburst. We found that the ejected particles are distributed in size following a power law of index -3, and, based on the ejecta mass and scaling laws, the impactor size is estimated at 30-90 m in radius, assuming an impact velocity of ∼5kms-1, and the same density (1500kgm-3) for the asteroid as for the projectile. We have inferred an asymmetry in the ejecta along the axis normal to the asteroid orbit plane, a likely indicator of an oblique impact. The impact is estimated to have occurred on November 27, with an accuracy not better than ± 3 days.
KW - methods: numerical
KW - minor planets, asteroids: individual ((596) Scheila)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=80052803274&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1088/0004-637X/738/2/130
DO - 10.1088/0004-637X/738/2/130
M3 - 期刊論文
AN - SCOPUS:80052803274
SN - 0004-637X
VL - 738
JO - Astrophysical Journal
JF - Astrophysical Journal
IS - 2
M1 - 130
ER -