Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

THE ORIGIN OF ASTEROID 101955 (1999 RQ 36 )

2010; IOP Publishing; Volume: 721; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1088/2041-8205/721/1/l53

ISSN

2041-8213

Autores

H. Campins, Alessandro Morbidelli, K. Tsiganis, J. de León, J. Licandro, D. S. Lauretta,

Tópico(s)

Isotope Analysis in Ecology

Resumo

Near-Earth asteroid (NEA) 101955 (1999 RQ36; henceforth RQ36) is especially accessible to spacecraft and is the primary target of NASA's OSIRIS-REx sample return mission; it is also a potentially hazardous asteroid. We combine dynamical and spectral information to identify the most likely main-belt origin of RQ36 and we conclude that it is the Polana family, located at a semimajor axis of about 2.42 AU. We also conclude that the Polana family may be the most important inner-belt source of low-albedo NEAs. These conclusions are based on the following results. (1) Dynamical evidence strongly favors an inner-belt, low-inclination (2.15 AU < a < 2.5 AU and i < 10°) origin, suggesting the ν6 resonance as the preferred (95% probability) delivery route. (2) This region is dominated by the Nysa and Polana families. (3) The Polana family is characterized by low albedos and B-class spectra or colors, the same albedo and spectral class as RQ36. (4) The Sloan Digital Sky Survey colors show that the Polana family is the branch of the Nysa–Polana complex that extends toward the ν6 resonance; furthermore, the Polana family has delivered objects of the size of RQ36 and larger into the ν6 resonance. (5) A quantitative comparison of visible and near-infrared spectra does not yield a unique match for RQ36; however, it is consistent with a compositional link between RQ36 and the Polana family.

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