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3D shape of asteroid (6) Hebe from VLT/SPHERE imaging: Implications for the origin of ordinary H chondrites

Publikace na Matematicko-fyzikální fakulta |
2017

Tento text není v aktuálním jazyce dostupný. Zobrazuje se verze "en".Abstrakt

Context. The high-angular-resolution capability of the new-generation ground-based adaptive-optics camera SPHERE at ESO VLT allows us to assess, for the very first time, the cratering record of medium-sized (D similar to 100-200 km) asteroids from the ground, opening the prospect of a new era of investigation of the asteroid belt's collisional history.

Aims. We investigate here the collisional history of asteroid (6) Hebe and challenge the idea that Hebe may be the parent body of ordinary H chondrites, the most common type of meteorites found on Earth (similar to 34% of the falls).

Methods. We observed Hebe with SPHERE as part of the science verification of the instrument.

Combined with earlier adaptiveoptics images and optical light curves, we model the spin and three-dimensional (3D) shape of Hebe and check the consistency of the derived model against available stellar occultations and thermal measurements. Results.

Our 3D shape model fits the images with sub-pixel residuals and the light curves to 0.02 mag. The rotation period (7.274 47 h), spin (ECJ2000 lambda, beta of 343 degrees, + 47 degrees), and volume-equivalent diameter (193 +/- 6 km) are consistent with previous determinations and thermophysical modeling.

Hebe's inferred density is 3.48 +/- 0.64 g cm(-3), in agreement with an intact interior based on its H-chondrite composition. Using the 3D shape model to derive the volume of the largest depression (likely impact crater), it appears that the latter is significantly smaller than the total volume of close-by S-type H-chondrite-like asteroid families.

Conclusions. Our results imply that (6) Hebe is not the most likely source of H chondrites.

Over the coming years, our team will collect similar high-precision shape measurements with VLT/SPHERE for similar to 40 asteroids covering the main compositional classes, thus providing an unprecedented dataset to investigate the origin and collisional evolution of the asteroid belt.