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Orbital Period Change of Dimorphos Due to the DART Kinetic Impact

Authors :
Thomas, Cristina A.
Naidu, Shantanu P.
Scheirich, Peter
Moskovitz, Nicholas A.
Pravec, Petr
Chesley, Steven R.
Rivkin, Andrew S.
Osip, David J.
Lister, Tim A.
Benner, Lance A. M.
Brozović, Marina
Contreras, Carlos
Morrell, Nidia
Rożek, Agata
Kušnirák, Peter
Hornoch, Kamil
Mages, Declan
Taylor, Patrick A.
Seymour, Andrew D.
Snodgrass, Colin
Jørgensen, Uffe G.
Dominik, Martin
Skiff, Brian
Polakis, Tom
Knight, Matthew M.
Farnham, Tony L.
Giorgini, Jon D.
Rush, Brian
Bellerose, Julie
Salas, Pedro
Armentrout, William P.
Watts, Galen
Busch, Michael W.
Chatelain, Joseph
Gomez, Edward
Greenstreet, Sarah
Phillips, Liz
Bonavita, Mariangela
Burgdorf, Martin J.
Khalouei, Elahe
Longa-Peña, Penélope
Rabus, Markus
Sajadian, Sedighe
Chabot, Nancy L.
Cheng, Andrew F.
Ryan, William H.
Ryan, Eileen V.
Holt, Carrie E.
Agrusa, Harrison F.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft successfully performed the first test of a kinetic impactor for asteroid deflection by impacting Dimorphos, the secondary of near-Earth binary asteroid (65803) Didymos, and changing the orbital period of Dimorphos. A change in orbital period of approximately 7 minutes was expected if the incident momentum from the DART spacecraft was directly transferred to the asteroid target in a perfectly inelastic collision, but studies of the probable impact conditions and asteroid properties indicated that a considerable momentum enhancement ($\beta$) was possible. In the years prior to impact, we used lightcurve observations to accurately determine the pre-impact orbit parameters of Dimorphos with respect to Didymos. Here we report the change in the orbital period of Dimorphos as a result of the DART kinetic impact to be -33.0 +/- 1.0 (3$\sigma$) minutes. Using new Earth-based lightcurve and radar observations, two independent approaches determined identical values for the change in the orbital period. This large orbit period change suggests that ejecta contributed a significant amount of momentum to the asteroid beyond what the DART spacecraft carried.<br />Comment: Accepted by Nature

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2303.02077
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-05805-2