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The Dimorphos ejecta plume properties revealed by LICIACube

Authors :
Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Física, Ingeniería de Sistemas y Teoría de la Señal
Universidad de Alicante. Instituto Universitario de Física Aplicada a las Ciencias y las Tecnologías
Dotto, Elisabetta
Deshapriya, J. D. Prasanna
Gai, Igor
Hasselmann, Pedro H.
Mazzotta Epifani, Elena
Poggiali, Giovanni
Rossi, Alessandro
Zanotti, Giovanni
Zinzi, Angelo
Bertini, Ivano
Brucato, John Robert
Dall’Ora, Massimo
Della Corte, Vincenzo
Ivanovski, Stavro
Lucchetti, Alice
Pajola, Maurizio
Amoroso, Marilena
Barnouin, Olivier
Campo Bagatin, Adriano
Capannolo, Andrea
Caporali, S.
Ceresoli, M.
Chabot, Nancy
Cheng, Andy F.
Cremonese, Gabriele
Fahnestock, Eugene G.
Farnham, Tony
Ferrari, Fabio
Gomez Casajus, L.
Gramigna, E.
Hirabayashi, Masatoshi
Ieva, Simone
Impresario, Gabriele
Jutzi, Martin
Lasagni Manghi, R.
Lavagna, Michèle
Li, Jian-Yang
Lombardo, M.
Modenini, Dario
Palumbo, Pasquale
Perna, Davide
Pirrotta, Simone
Raducan, Sabina D.
Richardson, Derek C.
Rivkin, Andy
Stickle, Angela M.
Sunshine, Jessica M.
Tortora, Paolo
Tusberti, Filippo
Zannoni, Marco
Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Física, Ingeniería de Sistemas y Teoría de la Señal
Universidad de Alicante. Instituto Universitario de Física Aplicada a las Ciencias y las Tecnologías
Dotto, Elisabetta
Deshapriya, J. D. Prasanna
Gai, Igor
Hasselmann, Pedro H.
Mazzotta Epifani, Elena
Poggiali, Giovanni
Rossi, Alessandro
Zanotti, Giovanni
Zinzi, Angelo
Bertini, Ivano
Brucato, John Robert
Dall’Ora, Massimo
Della Corte, Vincenzo
Ivanovski, Stavro
Lucchetti, Alice
Pajola, Maurizio
Amoroso, Marilena
Barnouin, Olivier
Campo Bagatin, Adriano
Capannolo, Andrea
Caporali, S.
Ceresoli, M.
Chabot, Nancy
Cheng, Andy F.
Cremonese, Gabriele
Fahnestock, Eugene G.
Farnham, Tony
Ferrari, Fabio
Gomez Casajus, L.
Gramigna, E.
Hirabayashi, Masatoshi
Ieva, Simone
Impresario, Gabriele
Jutzi, Martin
Lasagni Manghi, R.
Lavagna, Michèle
Li, Jian-Yang
Lombardo, M.
Modenini, Dario
Palumbo, Pasquale
Perna, Davide
Pirrotta, Simone
Raducan, Sabina D.
Richardson, Derek C.
Rivkin, Andy
Stickle, Angela M.
Sunshine, Jessica M.
Tortora, Paolo
Tusberti, Filippo
Zannoni, Marco
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) had an impact with Dimorphos (a satellite of the asteroid Didymos) on 26 September 20221. Ground-based observations showed that the Didymos system brightened by a factor of 8.3 after the impact because of ejecta, returning to the pre-impact brightness 23.7 days afterwards2. Hubble Space Telescope observations made from 15 minutes after impact to 18.5 days after, with a spatial resolution of 2.1 kilometres per pixel, showed a complex evolution of the ejecta3, consistent with other asteroid impact events. The momentum enhancement factor, determined using the measured binary period change4, ranges between 2.2 and 4.9, depending on the assumptions about the mass and density of Dimorphos5. Here we report observations from the LUKE and LEIA instruments on the LICIACube cube satellite, which was deployed 15 days in advance of the impact of DART. Data were taken from 71 seconds before the impact until 320 seconds afterwards. The ejecta plume was a cone with an aperture angle of 140 ± 4 degrees. The inner region of the plume was blue, becoming redder with increasing distance from Dimorphos. The ejecta plume exhibited a complex and inhomogeneous structure, characterized by filaments, dust grains and single or clustered boulders. The ejecta velocities ranged from a few tens of metres per second to about 500 metres per second.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1427413399
Document Type :
Electronic Resource