1112.5220 (Dave Jewitt)
Dave Jewitt
Some asteroids eject dust, unexpectedly producing transient, comet-like comae
and tails. First ascribed to the sublimation of near-surface water ice, mass
losing asteroids (also called "main-belt comets") can in fact be driven by a
surprising diversity of mechanisms. In this paper, we consider eleven dynamical
asteroids losing mass, in nine of which the ejected material is spatially
resolved. We address mechanisms for producing mass loss including rotational
instability, impact ejection, electrostatic repulsion, radiation pressure
sweeping, dehydration stresses and thermal fracture, in addition to the
sublimation of ice. In two objects (133P and 238P) the repetitive nature of the
observed activity leaves ice sublimation as the only reasonable explanation
while, in a third ((596) Scheila), a recent impact is the cause. Another impact
may account for activity in P/2010 A2 but this tiny object can also be
explained as having shed mass after reaching rotational instability. Mass loss
from (3200) Phaethon is probably due to cracking or dehydration at extreme
(~1000 K) perihelion temperatures, perhaps aided by radiation pressure
sweeping. For the other bodies, the mass loss mechanisms remain unidentified,
pending the acquisition of more and better data. While the active asteroid
sample size remains small, the evidence for an astonishing diversity of mass
loss processes in these bodies is clear.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1112.5220
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