A place were I can write...
My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.
February 10, 2014
Itokawa
Where are the craters on asteroid Itokawa? Missing -- unexpectedly. The Japanese
robot probe
Hayabusa approached the Earth-crossing asteroid
in 2005 and returned
pictures showing a surface unlike any other Solar System body yet
photographed -- a surface possibly devoid of craters. The leading hypothesis for the lack of common circular indentations is that asteroid Itokawa is a rubble
pile -- a bunch of rocks and ice chunks only loosely held together by a
small amount of gravity. If so, craters might not form so easily -- or be filled
in whenever the asteroid gets
jiggled by a passing planet or struck by a massive meteor. Recent Earth-based
observations of asteroid Itokawa have shown that one part of the interior even
has a higher
average interior density than the other part, another unexpected
discovery. The Hayabusa mission returned soil samples from Itokawa which are also
giving clues the ancient history of the unusual asteroid and our
entire Solar System.
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