The Planetary Science Journal (Jan 2023)

Dark Comets? Unexpectedly Large Nongravitational Accelerations on a Sample of Small Asteroids

  • Darryl Z. Seligman,
  • Davide Farnocchia,
  • Marco Micheli,
  • David Vokrouhlický,
  • Aster G. Taylor,
  • Steven R. Chesley,
  • Jennifer B. Bergner,
  • Peter Vereš,
  • Olivier R. Hainaut,
  • Karen J. Meech,
  • Maxime Devogele,
  • Petr Pravec,
  • Rob Matson,
  • Sam Deen,
  • David J. Tholen,
  • Robert Weryk,
  • Edgard G. Rivera-Valentín,
  • Benjamin N. L. Sharkey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/acb697
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
p. 35

Abstract

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We report statistically significant detections of nonradial, nongravitational accelerations based on astrometric data in the photometrically inactive objects 1998 KY _26 , 2005 VL _1 , 2016 NJ _33 , 2010 VL _65 , 2016 RH _120 , and 2010 RF _12 . The magnitudes of the nongravitational accelerations are greater than those typically induced by the Yarkovsky effect, and there is no radiation-based, nonradial effect that can be so large. Therefore, we hypothesize that the accelerations are driven by outgassing and calculate implied H _2 O production rates for each object. We attempt to reconcile outgassing-induced acceleration with the lack of visible comae or photometric activity via the absence of surface dust and low levels of gas production. Although these objects are small, and some are rapidly rotating, the surface cohesive forces are stronger than the rotational forces, and rapid rotation alone cannot explain the lack of surface debris. It is possible that surface dust was removed previously, perhaps via outgassing activity that increased the rotation rates to their present-day value. We calculate dust production rates of order ∼10 ^−4 g s ^−1 in each object, assuming that the nuclei are bare, within the upper limits of dust production from a sample stacked image of 1998 KY _26 of ${\dot{M}}_{\mathrm{Dust}}\lt 0.2$ g s ^−1 . This production corresponds to brightness variations of order ∼0.0025%, which are undetectable in extant photometric data. We assess the future observability of each of these targets and find that the orbit of 1998 KY _26 —which is also the target of the extended Hayabusa2 mission—exhibits favorable viewing geometry before 2025.

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