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Contact: Martha J. Heil   (818) 354-0850                  
       
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                         April 11, 2002

SOME ASTEROIDS HAVE ASTRONOMERS SEEING DOUBLE

     Binary asteroids -- two rocky objects orbiting about one 
another -- appear to be common in Earth-crossing orbits, 
astronomers report today in the journal Science. This makes 
them an important new asteroid class to study in case future 
generations find one coming near Earth.

     "If you see two bodies orbiting each other, you can tell 
how far away from each other they are and how fast they go 
around each other," said Dr. Lance Benner, an asteroid 
researcher and an author of the paper from NASA's Jet 
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "This helps us to 
determine the asteroids' mass, volume, internal structure and 
what they're made of." 

     Using the world's two most powerful astronomical radar 
telescopes, Benner and his colleagues, led by Jean-Luc Margot 
of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, estimate 
that about 16 percent of near-Earth asteroids larger than 200 
meters (219 yards) across are likely to be binary systems. 
These systems may have been formed by the pull of gravity 
during close encounters with our planet, Mercury, Venus or 
Mars.

     The first near-Earth binary asteroid ever detected, 2000 
DP107, was found by radar in September 2000 at NASA's 
Goldstone, Calif., tracking telescope facility. Subsequent 
observations were made at the National Science Foundation's 
Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico, operated by Cornell 
University. Like Earth's Moon, the smaller (300-meter or 
1,000-foot diameter) body always presents the same face to the 
larger (800 meters, or about a half-mile diameter) asteroid 
body as it orbits. To date, five near-Earth binary systems 
have been identified by radar. But none of them, adds radar 
astronomer Jon Giorgini, have orbits that could threaten 
Earth, at least through this century.

     Near-Earth asteroids may become binaries when the 
planets' much larger gravities pull on their rubble-clustered 
bodies, distorting them and sometimes breaking off a 
satellite. Theoretical and modeling results show that binary 
asteroids most likely form when the asteroids closely 
encounter the inner planets Earth or Mars, sometimes just 
10,000 miles from a planet's surface. 

     "Of course, the most important thing to know about any 
asteroid is whether it is two objects or one, and this is why 
we want to observe these binaries with radar whenever 
possible," said Dr. Steve Ostro, a senior research scientist 
at JPL. "Radar is the best way to identify interesting and 
potentially hazardous asteroids. Radar observations provide 
information that can be later used by spacecraft to do more 
detailed studies efficiently and at lower cost."

     Previous evidence that near-Earth binary asteroids were 
common came from craters on the Earth and Moon that formed in 
pairs and were exactly the same age. Astronomers also have 
noted the changes in brightness of reflected sunlight for some 
near-Earth asteroids, suggesting that a double system was 
causing an eclipse or occultation of one by the other.

     Jean-Luc Margot, of the California Institute of 
Technology, led the research. The article is also co-authored 
by Michael Nolan, research associate at Arecibo; Raymond 
Jurgens, Jon Giorgini and Martin Slade at the Jet Propulsion 
Laboratory; and Donald Campbell, professor of astronomy at 
Cornell University, Ithaca, New York.   The observations were 
made at the 70-meter Goldstone NASA tracking telescope in 
California and at Arecibo Observatory, which is operated by 
the National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center at Cornell under 
a cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation. 
JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology, 
manages many missions for NASA's Office of Space Science, 
Washington, D.C. More information on asteroid radar research 
is available at http://www.gps.Caltech.edu/~margot/2000DP107 
and http://echo.jpl.nasa.gov/ .

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