Washington, March 3 – NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has captured a series of photos of asteroid Dimorphos when it was deliberately hit by a 1,200-pound NASA spacecraft called DART, the US space agency said on Thursday.
After 10 months of flying in space, NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) — the world’s first planetary defence technology demonstration — on September 26 last year successfully hit asteroid Dimorphos.
The asteroid moonlet Dimorphos is a small body just 160 metres in diameter. It orbits a larger, 780-metre asteroid called Didymos.
Though neither Didymos nor Dimorphos poses any threat to Earth, data from the mission can help researchers how to potentially divert an asteroid’s path away from Earth, if ever necessary.
Hubble’s time-lapse movie of the aftermath of DART’s collision, detailed in the journal Nature, reveals surprising and remarkable, hour-by-hour changes as dust and chunks of debris were flung into space.
Smashing head on into the asteroid at 13,000 miles per hour, the DART impactor blasted over 1,000 tonnes of dust and rock off of the asteroid.
“The DART impact happened in a binary asteroid system. We’ve never witnessed an object collide with an asteroid in a binary asteroid system before in real time, and it’s really surprising. I think it’s fantastic. Too much stuff is going on here. It’s going to take some time to figure out,” said Jian-Yang Li of the Planetary Science Institute in Tucson, Arizona.
The movie shows three overlapping stages of the impact aftermath: the formation of an ejecta cone, the spiral swirl of debris caught up along the asteroid’s orbit about its companion asteroid, and the tail swept behind the asteroid by the pressure of sunlight (resembling a windsock caught in a breeze).
The Hubble movie starts at 1.3 hours before impact. In this view, both Didymos and Dimorphos are within the central bright spot; even Hubble can’t resolve the two asteroids separately. The thin, straight spikes projecting away from the centre (and seen in later images) are artefacts of Hubble’s optics.
The first post-impact snapshot is 2 hours after the event. Debris flies away from the asteroid, moving with a range of speeds faster than four miles per hour (fast enough to escape the asteroid’s gravitational pull, so it does not fall back onto the asteroid). The ejecta forms a largely hollow cone with long, stringy filaments.
At about 17 hours after the impact, the debris pattern entered a second stage. The dynamic interaction within the binary system starts to distort the cone shape of the ejecta pattern. The most prominent structures are rotating, pinwheel-shaped features.
The pinwheel is tied to the gravitational pull of the companion asteroid, Didymos.
“This is really unique for this particular incident,” said Li. “When I first saw these images, I couldn’t believe these features. I thought maybe the image was smeared or something.”
Hubble next captures the debris being swept back into a comet-like tail by the pressure of sunlight on the tiny dust particles. This stretches out into a debris train where the lightest particles travel the fastest and farthest from the asteroid. The mystery is compounded later when Hubble records the tail splitting in two for a few days.