3200 Phaethon is weirdly comet-like. Why?


3200 Phaethon: An asteroid-like body, venting gases into space.
Artist’s concept of asteroid 3200 Phaethon being heated by the sun. The asteroid’s surface might get so hot that sodium inside it might vaporize and vent into space. That might cause it brighten like a comet. It might also dislodge small pieces of rocky debris. Image via NASA/JPL-Caltech/ IPAC.

Weirdly comet-like 3200 Phaethon

Most annual meteor showers have comets as their sources. But not December’s Geminid meteors, whose source is a rocky body known as 3200 Phaethon. This object isn’t icy, like a comet. But it’s known to brighten as it nears the sun. And it has a tail. Plus, it spawns the Geminid meteor shower. And so scientists puzzle over 3200 Phaethon. How can a rocky asteroid leave behind debris that sparks a meteor shower? Where does its tail come from? On August 16, 2021, scientists with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California said they have a new idea that might help explain 3200 Phaethon’s comet-like behavior. They said the answer might be sodium fizzling from 3200 Phaethon’s surface. Their statement explained that this asteroid:

… Brightens as it gets close to the sun. Comets typically behave like this: When they heat up, their icy surfaces vaporize, causing them to become more active and brighten as the venting gases and dust scatter more sunlight. But what is causing Phaethon to brighten if not vaporizing ices?

The culprit could be sodium. As the new study’s authors explain, Phaethon’s elongated, 524-day orbit takes the object well within the orbit of Mercury, during which time the sun heats the asteroid’s surface up to about 1,390 F (750 C). With such a warm orbit, any water, carbon dioxide, or carbon monoxide ice near the asteroid’s surface would have been baked off long ago. But, at that temperature, sodium may be fizzing from the asteroid’s rock and into space.

Astronomer Joe Masiero of IPAC at Caltech is lead author of the new study. He said:

We know it’s an asteroid and the source of the Geminids. But it contains little to no ice, so we were intrigued by the possibility that sodium, which is relatively plentiful in asteroids, could be the element driving this activity.

Gray background with line of dots and grid. A faint, fuzzy line connects some of the dots.
View larger. | Look closely along the line of white dots. A faint dust trail is visible between the dots. This faint dust trail – left behind by 3200 Phaethon, parent body for the Geminid meteor shower – was captured for the first time in 2019 by a camera called WISPR aboard the Parker Solar Probe. At that time, astronomers said that something “catastrophic” might have happened to Phaethon a couple of thousand years ago, to create this trail of debris and the Geminid meteor shower. Now astronomers are wondering if sodium fizz is a better answer. Image via Brendan Gallagher/ Guillermo Stenborg/ U.S. Naval Research Lab.

Inspired by the Geminid meteors

Masiero and his team said observations of Geminid meteors inspired them. Their statement explained:

When meteoroids – small pieces of rocky debris from space – streak through Earth’s atmosphere as meteors, they disintegrate. But before they do, friction with the atmosphere causes the air surrounding the meteoroids to reach thousands of degrees, generating light. The color of this light represents the elements they contain. Sodium, for example, creates an orange tinge. The Geminids are known to be low in sodium.

Until now, it was assumed that these small pieces of rock somehow lost their sodium after leaving the asteroid. This new study suggests that the sodium may actually play a key role in ejecting the Geminid meteoroids from Phaethon’s surface.

[We] think that as the asteroid approaches the sun, its sodium heats up and vaporizes. This process would have depleted the surface of sodium long ago, but sodium within the asteroid still heats up, vaporizes, and fizzes into space through cracks and fissures in Phaethon’s outermost crust. These jets would provide enough oomph to eject the rocky debris off its surface.

So the fizzing sodium could explain not only the asteroid’s cometlike brightening, but also how the Geminid meteoroids would be ejected from the asteroid and why they contain little sodium.

Björn Davidsson of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory is a co-author of the study. He added:

Asteroids like Phaethon have very weak gravity, so it doesn’t take a lot of force to kick debris from the surface or dislodge rock from a fracture. Our models suggest that very small quantities of sodium are all that’s needed to do this. It’s nothing explosive, like the erupting vapor from an icy comet’s surface. It’s more of a steady fizz.

Read more: Fizzing Sodium Could Explain Asteroid Phaethon’s Cometlike Activity

3200 Phaethon: Big irregular roundish space object with white dust streaming from one side.
Here’s another artist’s concept of what asteroid 3200 Phaethon might look like close up. Notice its blue color and tail of dust. Image via Heather Roper/ UANews.

All that, and blue, too

By the way, the comet-like behavior of this asteroid isn’t the only unusual thing about it. For one thing, 3200 Phaethon is an odd color for an asteroid. Most asteroids are dull grey to red, depending on the type of material on their surface. 3200 Phaethon is blue. Blue asteroids are known, but make up only a fraction of all known asteroids. And Phaethon isn’t just blue. It’s one of the bluest of similarly-colored asteroids (or comets) in the solar system.

Here’s another odd feature of 3200 Phaethon. While comets tend to have more elliptical orbits, asteroid orbits are more circular. 3200 Phaethon’s orbit – which is now exceedingly well known – is highly elongated, reminiscent of some comets. Its orbit crosses the orbits of Mars, Earth, Venus and Mercury.

Plus its orbit brings 3200 Phaethon closer to the sun than any other named asteroid (though some smaller, unnamed asteroids come even closer). At its closest point, Phaethon is only 13 million miles (20.9 million km) from the sun. That’s less than half of Mercury’s closest distance.

The name of this object – 3200 Phaethon – honors its relationship to the sun, by the way. In Greek mythology, Phaethon was the son of the sun god Helios.

Solar system diagram with long orbit of Phaethon from beyond Mars to near the sun.
Orbital path of 3200 Phaethon. In 2017, Phaethon came closer to Earth than it will again until 2093. The Geminids are always a reliable shower, but the shower was extra special in 2017 because its parent object was nearby. Image via SkyandTelescope.com. See photos: With 3200 Phaethon nearby, 2017 was a grand year for the Geminids.

A potentially hazardous asteroid

3200 Phaethon is classified as a potentially hazardous asteroid. But doesn’t mean it’s a threat to Earth. It just means two things. First, 3200 Phaethon is big. The latest estimates (2021) suggest it’s 3.6 miles (5.8 km) wide. It’s big enough to cause significant regional damage if it were to strike Earth. Second, it’s known to make periodic close approaches to Earth. But astronomers know of no upcoming strike by this object in this foreseeable future.

In 2017, 3200 Phaethon came closer to Earth than it will again until 2093. That year, at its closest, it was about 26 times the moon’s distance away.

Both amateur and professional astronomers watched 3200 Phaethon as carefully as they could in 2017. For example, Northolt Branch Observatories in London, England, created the animation below from images it captured in 2017.

Steven Bellavia also produced a video (below) of 3200 Phaethon in 2017. He commented then that he’d endured cloudy weather and sub-freezing temperatures in order to capture the images.

Mike Olason in Denver, Colorado, captured 3200 Phaethon on December 4, 2017:

Four gray background images with stars and one larger dot.
Photos captured about an hour after Phaethon’s closest approach to Earth in 2017. Image via Mike Olason.
Glowing yellow-orange object slightly elongated to one side.
This closeup image of 3200 Phaethon by NASA’s STEREO A spacecraft in 2017 shows a tail extending faintly toward lower left. Image via NASA/ SkyandTelescope.com.
Light gray oval rotating against dark gray background.
Radar images of 3200 Phaethon generated by astronomers at the Arecibo Observatory on December 17, 2017. Image via Wikipedia.

History of this baffling object

3200 Phaethon was the first asteroid to be discovered via spacecraft, on October 11, 1983. Astronomers Simon F. Green and John K. Davies noticed it while searching Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) data for moving objects. Charles T. Kowal confirmed it optically and said it was asteroid-like in appearance. The object received the provisional designation 1983 TB. Two years later, in 1985, using the convention for naming asteroids, astronomers assigned it its asteroid number and name: 3200 Phaethon.

Before 3200 Phaethon, scientists linked all known meteor showers to comets and not asteroids.

Thus 3200 Phaethon surprised them from the beginning, because – while it looked like an asteroid – it appeared to be the source of the annual Geminid meteor shower. Astronomers began calling 3200 Phaethon a comet-asteroid hybrid, an asteroid that behaves like a comet. Later, they began using the term rock-comet.

What else will we learn about this object, as the years pass?

eight images of roundish gray object with slightly different markings.
The composition of 3200 Phaethon resembles that of asteroid 2 Pallas. Both are dark, B-type asteroids composed of materials that have been modified by water. The 1st in this series of Hubble images of 3200 Phaethon in 2017 is marked with the asteroid’s spin axis (top) and south pole. Image via B.E. Schmidt et al./ NASA/ ESA/ SkyandTelescope.com.

Bottom line: The Geminid meteor shower has a unique source – 3200 Phaethon – sometimes called a comet-asteroid hybrid, or a rock-comet. In 2021, scientists suggested that some of this object’s comet-like behavior might stem from sodium fizzling from its surface.

Via JPL

Via U.S. Naval Research Lab

See photos: With 3200 Phaethon nearby, 2017 was a grand year for the Geminids

The post 3200 Phaethon is weirdly comet-like. Why? first appeared on EarthSky.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/3g4GSP5
3200 Phaethon: An asteroid-like body, venting gases into space.
Artist’s concept of asteroid 3200 Phaethon being heated by the sun. The asteroid’s surface might get so hot that sodium inside it might vaporize and vent into space. That might cause it brighten like a comet. It might also dislodge small pieces of rocky debris. Image via NASA/JPL-Caltech/ IPAC.

Weirdly comet-like 3200 Phaethon

Most annual meteor showers have comets as their sources. But not December’s Geminid meteors, whose source is a rocky body known as 3200 Phaethon. This object isn’t icy, like a comet. But it’s known to brighten as it nears the sun. And it has a tail. Plus, it spawns the Geminid meteor shower. And so scientists puzzle over 3200 Phaethon. How can a rocky asteroid leave behind debris that sparks a meteor shower? Where does its tail come from? On August 16, 2021, scientists with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California said they have a new idea that might help explain 3200 Phaethon’s comet-like behavior. They said the answer might be sodium fizzling from 3200 Phaethon’s surface. Their statement explained that this asteroid:

… Brightens as it gets close to the sun. Comets typically behave like this: When they heat up, their icy surfaces vaporize, causing them to become more active and brighten as the venting gases and dust scatter more sunlight. But what is causing Phaethon to brighten if not vaporizing ices?

The culprit could be sodium. As the new study’s authors explain, Phaethon’s elongated, 524-day orbit takes the object well within the orbit of Mercury, during which time the sun heats the asteroid’s surface up to about 1,390 F (750 C). With such a warm orbit, any water, carbon dioxide, or carbon monoxide ice near the asteroid’s surface would have been baked off long ago. But, at that temperature, sodium may be fizzing from the asteroid’s rock and into space.

Astronomer Joe Masiero of IPAC at Caltech is lead author of the new study. He said:

We know it’s an asteroid and the source of the Geminids. But it contains little to no ice, so we were intrigued by the possibility that sodium, which is relatively plentiful in asteroids, could be the element driving this activity.

Gray background with line of dots and grid. A faint, fuzzy line connects some of the dots.
View larger. | Look closely along the line of white dots. A faint dust trail is visible between the dots. This faint dust trail – left behind by 3200 Phaethon, parent body for the Geminid meteor shower – was captured for the first time in 2019 by a camera called WISPR aboard the Parker Solar Probe. At that time, astronomers said that something “catastrophic” might have happened to Phaethon a couple of thousand years ago, to create this trail of debris and the Geminid meteor shower. Now astronomers are wondering if sodium fizz is a better answer. Image via Brendan Gallagher/ Guillermo Stenborg/ U.S. Naval Research Lab.

Inspired by the Geminid meteors

Masiero and his team said observations of Geminid meteors inspired them. Their statement explained:

When meteoroids – small pieces of rocky debris from space – streak through Earth’s atmosphere as meteors, they disintegrate. But before they do, friction with the atmosphere causes the air surrounding the meteoroids to reach thousands of degrees, generating light. The color of this light represents the elements they contain. Sodium, for example, creates an orange tinge. The Geminids are known to be low in sodium.

Until now, it was assumed that these small pieces of rock somehow lost their sodium after leaving the asteroid. This new study suggests that the sodium may actually play a key role in ejecting the Geminid meteoroids from Phaethon’s surface.

[We] think that as the asteroid approaches the sun, its sodium heats up and vaporizes. This process would have depleted the surface of sodium long ago, but sodium within the asteroid still heats up, vaporizes, and fizzes into space through cracks and fissures in Phaethon’s outermost crust. These jets would provide enough oomph to eject the rocky debris off its surface.

So the fizzing sodium could explain not only the asteroid’s cometlike brightening, but also how the Geminid meteoroids would be ejected from the asteroid and why they contain little sodium.

Björn Davidsson of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory is a co-author of the study. He added:

Asteroids like Phaethon have very weak gravity, so it doesn’t take a lot of force to kick debris from the surface or dislodge rock from a fracture. Our models suggest that very small quantities of sodium are all that’s needed to do this. It’s nothing explosive, like the erupting vapor from an icy comet’s surface. It’s more of a steady fizz.

Read more: Fizzing Sodium Could Explain Asteroid Phaethon’s Cometlike Activity

3200 Phaethon: Big irregular roundish space object with white dust streaming from one side.
Here’s another artist’s concept of what asteroid 3200 Phaethon might look like close up. Notice its blue color and tail of dust. Image via Heather Roper/ UANews.

All that, and blue, too

By the way, the comet-like behavior of this asteroid isn’t the only unusual thing about it. For one thing, 3200 Phaethon is an odd color for an asteroid. Most asteroids are dull grey to red, depending on the type of material on their surface. 3200 Phaethon is blue. Blue asteroids are known, but make up only a fraction of all known asteroids. And Phaethon isn’t just blue. It’s one of the bluest of similarly-colored asteroids (or comets) in the solar system.

Here’s another odd feature of 3200 Phaethon. While comets tend to have more elliptical orbits, asteroid orbits are more circular. 3200 Phaethon’s orbit – which is now exceedingly well known – is highly elongated, reminiscent of some comets. Its orbit crosses the orbits of Mars, Earth, Venus and Mercury.

Plus its orbit brings 3200 Phaethon closer to the sun than any other named asteroid (though some smaller, unnamed asteroids come even closer). At its closest point, Phaethon is only 13 million miles (20.9 million km) from the sun. That’s less than half of Mercury’s closest distance.

The name of this object – 3200 Phaethon – honors its relationship to the sun, by the way. In Greek mythology, Phaethon was the son of the sun god Helios.

Solar system diagram with long orbit of Phaethon from beyond Mars to near the sun.
Orbital path of 3200 Phaethon. In 2017, Phaethon came closer to Earth than it will again until 2093. The Geminids are always a reliable shower, but the shower was extra special in 2017 because its parent object was nearby. Image via SkyandTelescope.com. See photos: With 3200 Phaethon nearby, 2017 was a grand year for the Geminids.

A potentially hazardous asteroid

3200 Phaethon is classified as a potentially hazardous asteroid. But doesn’t mean it’s a threat to Earth. It just means two things. First, 3200 Phaethon is big. The latest estimates (2021) suggest it’s 3.6 miles (5.8 km) wide. It’s big enough to cause significant regional damage if it were to strike Earth. Second, it’s known to make periodic close approaches to Earth. But astronomers know of no upcoming strike by this object in this foreseeable future.

In 2017, 3200 Phaethon came closer to Earth than it will again until 2093. That year, at its closest, it was about 26 times the moon’s distance away.

Both amateur and professional astronomers watched 3200 Phaethon as carefully as they could in 2017. For example, Northolt Branch Observatories in London, England, created the animation below from images it captured in 2017.

Steven Bellavia also produced a video (below) of 3200 Phaethon in 2017. He commented then that he’d endured cloudy weather and sub-freezing temperatures in order to capture the images.

Mike Olason in Denver, Colorado, captured 3200 Phaethon on December 4, 2017:

Four gray background images with stars and one larger dot.
Photos captured about an hour after Phaethon’s closest approach to Earth in 2017. Image via Mike Olason.
Glowing yellow-orange object slightly elongated to one side.
This closeup image of 3200 Phaethon by NASA’s STEREO A spacecraft in 2017 shows a tail extending faintly toward lower left. Image via NASA/ SkyandTelescope.com.
Light gray oval rotating against dark gray background.
Radar images of 3200 Phaethon generated by astronomers at the Arecibo Observatory on December 17, 2017. Image via Wikipedia.

History of this baffling object

3200 Phaethon was the first asteroid to be discovered via spacecraft, on October 11, 1983. Astronomers Simon F. Green and John K. Davies noticed it while searching Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) data for moving objects. Charles T. Kowal confirmed it optically and said it was asteroid-like in appearance. The object received the provisional designation 1983 TB. Two years later, in 1985, using the convention for naming asteroids, astronomers assigned it its asteroid number and name: 3200 Phaethon.

Before 3200 Phaethon, scientists linked all known meteor showers to comets and not asteroids.

Thus 3200 Phaethon surprised them from the beginning, because – while it looked like an asteroid – it appeared to be the source of the annual Geminid meteor shower. Astronomers began calling 3200 Phaethon a comet-asteroid hybrid, an asteroid that behaves like a comet. Later, they began using the term rock-comet.

What else will we learn about this object, as the years pass?

eight images of roundish gray object with slightly different markings.
The composition of 3200 Phaethon resembles that of asteroid 2 Pallas. Both are dark, B-type asteroids composed of materials that have been modified by water. The 1st in this series of Hubble images of 3200 Phaethon in 2017 is marked with the asteroid’s spin axis (top) and south pole. Image via B.E. Schmidt et al./ NASA/ ESA/ SkyandTelescope.com.

Bottom line: The Geminid meteor shower has a unique source – 3200 Phaethon – sometimes called a comet-asteroid hybrid, or a rock-comet. In 2021, scientists suggested that some of this object’s comet-like behavior might stem from sodium fizzling from its surface.

Via JPL

Via U.S. Naval Research Lab

See photos: With 3200 Phaethon nearby, 2017 was a grand year for the Geminids

The post 3200 Phaethon is weirdly comet-like. Why? first appeared on EarthSky.



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