Date:
Tue, 20/10/201512:30-13:30
Location:
Kaplun building, Room No. 200
Lecturer: Dr. David Polishook,
Affiliation: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Abstract:
Asteroids are considered to be
collections of rocks separated by voids
with no tensile strength to hold their
components. When an asteroid is
spinning-up, its gravity supposed to be
the only force resisting the centrifugal
acceleration before the body breaks
apart. This notion is argumented by the
observation that asteroids larger than
~300 m do not rotate faster than 2.2
hours per cycle. Smaller asteroids
(<300 m) that reach faster rotations
are therefore strong monolithic bodies
from which the larger asteroids are
composed. In recent years,
theoreticians argue that friction and
electrical (Van der Wals) forces can
maintain the weak asteroid body by
increasing its cohesion value and this is
the force that allows small asteroids to
rotate fast and not their supposed
monolithic nature. However, the clear
spin barrier at 2.2 hours for asteroids
larger than ~300 m serves as an
argument against the non-zero
cohesion model since it requires a
correlation between size and spin rate.
We report an observation of a 2 km size
asteroid, (60716) 2000 GD65, with a
lightcurve indicating a rotation period
of 1.9529±0.0002 hours. This adds to a
handful of asteroids, recently observed
by the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF)
survey (Chang et al. 2014, 2015), with
diameters between 0.5-1.5 km and
lightcurves indicating rotation periods
of 1.2-1.9 hours. We apply the non-zero
cohesion model (Holsapple 2007) to
these asteroids and find that the fast
rotating asteroids must have internal
cohesive strength of at least 25 to 250
Pa in order to prevent disruption
against centrifugal acceleration. Similar
cohesion values have been found within
weak lunar soils (~100 Pa). Among the
population of small asteroids only 10%
must have substantial internal cohesion
of over 1000 Pa to prevent disruption,
however none of them are rotating fast
enough to require a fully monolithic
body, i.e. cohesion >10 kPa.
Additional details of the upcoming Astrophysics'
seminars can be found on the following link.
האירוע הזה כולל שיחת וידאו ב-Google Hangouts.
הצטרף: https://hangouts.google.com/hangouts/_/mail.huji.ac.il/astrophysics?hceid=bWFpbC5odWppLmFjLmlsX2c0czhydDlpcmhwZzRvdGNybWIzZGFqcjdvQGdyb3VwLmNhbGVuZGFyLmdvb2dsZS5jb20.h4scuf8jld40dhm8ijj28c650s&hs=121