Elliptical ejecta of asteroid Dimorphos is due to its surface curvature
Articles
Overview
published in
- Nature Communications Journal
publication date
- February 2025
start page
- 1
end page
- 16
issue
- 1602
volume
- 16
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)
- 2041-1723
abstract
-
Kinetic deflection is a planetary defense technique delivering spacecraft momentum to a small body to deviate its course from Earth. The deflection efficiency depends on the impactor and target. Among them, the contribution of global curvature was poorly understood. The ejecta plume created by NASA Double Asteroid Redirection Test impact on its target asteroid,
Dimorphos, exhibited an elliptical shape almost aligned along its north-south direction. Here, we identify that this elliptical ejecta plume resulted from the targets curvature, reducing the momentum transfer to 44 ± 10% along the
orbit track compared to an equivalent impact on a flat target. We also find lower kinetic deflection of impacts on smaller near-Earth objects due to higher curvature. A solution to mitigate low deflection efficiency is to apply multiple
low-energy impactors rather than a single high-energy impactor. Rapid reconnaissance to acquire a targets properties before deflection enables determining the proper locations and timing of impacts.
Classification
subjects
- Aeronautics
- Astronomy
keywords
- aerospace engineering; asteroids, comets and kuiper belt