NASA's Voyage to Giant Asteroids: Vesta & Ceres
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June 18, 2007

NASA's Voyage to Giant Asteroids: Vesta & Ceres

Asteroids_2Today there about 1000 objects in Earth-crossing or nearly Earth-crossing orbits orbits that are larger than one-kilometer across, which strike the planet on average on once every million years. The rate at which impacts occured after the Earth first formed during the aptly named Hadean Period were almost a million times greater.

Many of these rogue objects came from the asteroid belt between and Jupiter is an ancient remnant, dusty, forgotten relics from the solar system's beginnings.

To learn about the origins and ultimate destinies of the asteroid belt, NASA plans to launch a robotic probe named Dawn -its mission: fly to two giant asteroids, Ceres and Vesta, and explore them up close for the first time. Liftoff is scheduled for July 2007.

Dawn's first stop is Vesta—an asteroid that may point to ancient supernovas in the solar system's birth.Telescopic observations of Vesta and studies of meteorites believed to have come from Vesta suggest that the asteroid may have been partially molten early in its history, allowing heavy elements like iron to sink and form a dense core with a lighter crust on top.

Asteroid_belt_1"That's interesting--and a bit puzzling," says Chris Russell, Principal Investigator for Dawn at the University of California, Los Angeles. Melting requires a source of heat such as gravitational energy released when material comes together to make an asteroid. But Vesta is a small world—"too small," he says--only about 530 km across on average. "There would not have been enough gravitational energy to melt the asteroid when it formed."

Supernovas may provide the explanation: Some scientists believe that when Vesta first formed, it was "spiced up" by aluminum-26 and iron-60 created in possibly two supernovas that exploded around the time of the solar system's birth. These forms of iron and aluminum are radioactive isotopes that could have provided the extra heat needed to melt Vesta. Once these radioactive isotopes decayed, the asteroid would have cooled and solidified to its present state.

This idea would explain why Vesta's surface appears to bear the marks of ancient basaltic lava flows and magma oceans, much as Earth's moon does. The supernovas would also change the sequence of events involved in planet formation:

"When I went to school, the thought was that the Earth got together, heated up, and the iron went to the center and the silicate floated on top, producing a core-forming event," Russell says. This view assumes that smaller planetoids that collided and merged to form Earth were amorphous masses that hadn't yet formed their own iron cores. But if chunks of rock the size of Vesta could melt and form dense cores, "it would affect the way the planets and their cores grew and evolved."

If all goes as planned, Dawn would reach Vesta and enter orbit in October 2011. After orbiting Vesta for 7 months, Dawn will undertake a maneuver never before attempted: leave the orbit of one distant body, and fly to and orbit Ceres.

This kind of "asteroid hopping" would be practically impossible if Dawn used conventional rocket fuel. "We would need one of the largest rockets that the US has to carry all the propellant," says Marc Rayman, Project System Engineer for Dawn at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Instead, Dawn uses ion propulsion, which requires only one-tenth as much propellant. Dawn’s engines proved themselves onboard an earlier, experimental spacecraft known as Deep Space 1, managed by NASA's New Millennium Program.

Dawn's fuel-efficient ion engines will propel the craft from Vesta, arriving at Ceres by February 2015. Measuring 950 km in diameter, Ceres, a dwarf planet the size of Texas, is by far the largest object in the asteroid belt. Remarkably, it is not a rocky world like Vesta, but one covered in water ice.

"Ceres is going to be a real surprise to us," says Russell. Because it appears to harbor a layer of ice 60 to 120 km thick, the surface of Ceres has probably changed more dramatically over time than Vesta's, obscuring much of its early history. But while Ceres may not offer such an early window onto planet formation, it could teach scientists about the role that water has played in planetary evolution since then. For example, why can some rocky worlds like Ceres and Earth hold on to large amounts of water, while others, like Vesta, end up bone dry?

"Vesta will tell us about the earliest epoch, and Ceres will tell us about what happened later," Russell says.

Posted by Casey Kazan.

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Related Posts:

Past as Prelude: Asteroids & the Origin of Life

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