The Solar System

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
PART 4 | THE SOLAR SYSTEM

Most asteroids are too small for their
gravity to pull them into a spherical
shape. Impacts break them into
irregularly shaped fragments.

Visual-wavelength image

Enhanced visual image

Visual

Eros appears to be a
solid fragment of rock.

The surface of
Mathilde is very
dark rock.

5 meters

50 km

5 km

If you walked across the
surface of an irregularly
shaped asteroid such as
Eros, you would find
gravity very weak; and in
many places, it would
not be perpendicular
to the surface.

Like most asteroids,
Gaspra would look
gray to your eyes;
but, in this enhanced
image at left, color
differences probably
indicate difference in
mineralogy.

10 km

Visual-wavelength image

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1a

Seen from Earth, asteroids look like faint points of light moving in front of distant
stars. Not many years ago they were known mostly for drifting slowly through the field of
view and spoiling long time exposures. Some astronomers referred to them as β€œthe vermin of
the sky.” Spacecraft have now visited asteroids, and the images radioed back to Earth show
that the asteroids are mostly small, gray, irregular worlds heavily cratered by impacts.

The Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) spacecraft
visited the asteroid Eros in 2000 and found it to be heavily
cratered by collisions and covered by a layer of crushed
rock ranging from dust to large boulders. The NEAR
spacecraft eventually landed on Eros.

The mass of an asteroid can be found from its
gravitational influence on passing spacecraft.
Its volume can be measured using images
made from a range of perspectives. The
density is mass divided by volume. Mathilde,
at left, has such a low density that it
cannot be solid rock. Like many
asteroids, Mathilde may be a rubble
pile of broken fragments with large
empty spaces between fragments.

NASA

NASA

NASA

NASA

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