An illustration of an asteroid. The asteroid roughly the size of Rome’s Colosseum — between 300 to 650 feet (100 to 200 meters) in length — has been detected by an international team of European astronomers using NASA's James Webb Space Telescope. They used data from the calibration of the MIRI instrument, in which the team serendipitously detected an interloping asteroid. The object is likely the smallest observed to date by Webb and may be an example of an object measuring under 1 kilometer in length within the main asteroid belt, located between Mars and Jupiter. More observations are needed to better characterize this object’s nature and properties. Credits: ARTWORK: N. Bartmann (ESA/Webb), ESO/M. Kornmesser and S. Brunier, N. Risinger (skysurvey.org)
An asteroid roughly the size of Rome’s Colosseum — between 300 to 650 feet
(100 to 200 meters) in length — has been detected by an international team of
European astronomers using NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. Their project
used data from the calibration of the Mid-InfraRed
Instrument (MIRI), in which the team serendipitously
detected an interloping asteroid. The object is likely the smallest observed to
date by Webb and may be an example of an object measuring under 0.6 miles (1
kilometer) in length within the main asteroid belt, located between Mars and
Jupiter. More observations are needed to better characterize this object’s
nature and properties.
“We — completely unexpectedly — detected a small asteroid in publicly
available MIRI calibration observations,” explained Thomas Müller, an
astronomer at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics in Germany.
“The measurements are some of the first MIRI measurements targeting the
ecliptic plane and our work suggests that many new objects will be detected
with this instrument.”
These Webb observations, published in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics, were not designed to hunt for new asteroids — in fact, they were
calibration images of the main belt asteroid (10920) 1998 BC1, which
astronomers discovered in 1998. The observations were conducted to test the
performance of some of MIRI’s filters, but the calibration team considered them
to have failed for technical reasons due to the brightness of the target and an
offset telescope pointing. Despite this, the data on asteroid 10920 were used
by the team to establish and test a new technique to constrain an object’s
orbit and to estimate its size. The validity of the method was demonstrated for
asteroid 10920 using the MIRI observations combined with data from ground-based
telescopes and ESA’s Gaia mission.
In the course of the analysis of the MIRI data, the team found the smaller
interloper in the same field of view. The team’s results suggest the object
measures 100–200 meters, occupies a very low-inclination orbit, and was located
in the inner main-belt region at the time of the Webb observations.
“Our results show that even ‘failed’ Webb observations can be
scientifically useful, if you have the right mindset and a little bit of luck,”
elaborated Müller. “Our detection lies in the main asteroid belt, but Webb’s
incredible sensitivity made it possible to see this roughly 100-meter object at
a distance of more than 100 million kilometers.”
The detection of this asteroid — which the team suspects to be the smallest
observed to date by Webb and one of the smallest detected in the main belt —
would, if confirmed as a new asteroid discovery, have important implications
for our understanding of the formation and evolution of the solar system.
Current models predict the occurrence of asteroids down to very small sizes,
but small asteroids have been studied in less detail than their larger
counterparts owing to the difficulty of observing these objects. Future
dedicated Webb observations will allow astronomers to study asteroids smaller
than 1 kilometer in size.
What’s more, this result suggests that Webb will also be able to
serendipitously contribute to the detection of new asteroids. The team suspects
that even short MIRI observations close to the plane of the solar system will
always include a few asteroids, most of which will be unknown objects.
In order to confirm that the object detected is a newly discovered
asteroid, more position data relative to background stars is required from
follow-up studies to constrain the object’s orbit.
“This is a fantastic result which highlights the capabilities of MIRI to
serendipitously detect a previously undetectable size of asteroid in the main
belt,” concluded Bryan Holler, Webb support scientist at the Space Telescope
Science Institute in Baltimore, Maryland. “Repeats of these observations are in
the process of being scheduled, and we are fully expecting new asteroid
interlopers in those images.”
The James Webb Space Telescope is the world’s premier space science observatory. Webb will solve mysteries in our solar system, look beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probe the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space Agency) and the Canadian Space Agency.
Source: Webb
Detects Extremely Small Main Belt Asteroid | NASA
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