Peek at huge asteroid raises more questions than answers
Probe’s view reveals space rock’s strange surface coating

By Clara Moskowitz
Space.com

updated 8/10/2010 5:34:12 PM ET

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38647568/ns/technology_and_science-space


A European space probe has beamed back a haunting image of an alien 
space rock with unique angles and surface coating that raises more 
questions about asteroids than it answers.

The European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft recently flew by Lutetia, 
a huge asteroid midway along Rosetta's path to its ultimate destination, 
the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, which it is due to reach in 2014.

Near-Earth objects are a topic of growing interest to scientists. A 
two-day NASA workshop in Washington, D.C., this week is tackling topics 
such as what to do about space rocks that could threaten Earth, as well 
as how to transport astronauts to an asteroid for exploration — a goal 
under President Barack Obama's vision for the space agency.

Missions like Rosetta's could help scientists learn more about space 
rocks and inform these and other goals.

At about 62 miles wide, Lutetia was the largest asteroid yet visited by 
a spacecraft.

A close approach to Lutetia allowed the probe to snap photos and 
measurements using 17 different onboard instruments. The results paint a 
picture of a strange asteroid indeed.

I've never seen anything like it," said Claudia Alexander, project 
scientist for the U.S. Rosetta Project. "It looked as though it could 
have been fractured off of a mother asteroid — it was all angles and 
flat planes, ancient impacts overlaid by newer ones, covered by dust of 
some kind."


More mysteries

One giant dent in the asteroid's side was particularly puzzling. 
Alexander guessed that some other space rock had collided with Lutetia 
long ago.

The surface of Lutetia also had an odd appearance, as if some large 
boulders had rolled over it.

"If that is indeed what we're seeing, the question becomes: What could 
have caused the rolling?" Alexander said. "Perhaps the asteroid spun up, 
spun down or experienced some orbital irregularity. It's not clear right 
now that the asteroid is subject to the forces that could cause these 
things. This is another issue for further study."

Astronomers have been interested in Lutetia for years because it is one 
of the largest asteroids in the solar system. The light reflecting off 
of it produces a pattern unlike that of any other asteroid that has been 
studied.

"Right now we have more questions than answers," Alexander said. "We can 
only speculate at this point about what we're seeing in the pictures."


Asteroids revealed

Scientists expect the data from Rosetta's visit to help them calculate 
the asteroid's mass and density, which could reveal more about its 
creation and composition.

One idea posits that Lutetia was born when a planet broke apart billions 
of years ago. Or maybe this bit of rock was a leftover from the 
beginning of the solar system — a fragment of planet-building material, 
called a planetesimal, that never got used to create a larger body.

During the coming months astronomers will analyze the trove of 
information provided by Rosetta to begin assembling some answers.

"When all the data are analyzed, Lutetia will be one of the best-known 
asteroids out there," said Rita Schulz, ESA project scientist for the 
Rosetta Mission. "These spectacular images are just the beginning."

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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