By ANDY FLEMING
ESA’s Herschel Space Observatory captured asteroid Apophis
in its field of view during the approach to Earth on 5/6 January 2013. This
image shows the asteroid in Herschel’s three PACS wavelengths: 70, 100 and 160
microns, respectively. Its closest pass, on 9 January 2013, brings it to 14.45
million km from Earth, 35–40 times that of the distance of the Moon. In 2029,
it will approach even closer than the geostationary orbit of many satellites,
which are positioned at an altitude of 36 000 km. During the latest pass,
Herschel collected important information about the physical properties of the
asteroid, which will help astronomers make refined predictions for the future
trajectory of the asteroid.
ESA’s Herschel space observatory made new
observations of asteroid Apophis as it approached Earth this weekend. The data
shows the asteroid to be bigger than first estimated, and less reflective.
Catalogued as asteroid (99942) Apophis
(previously 2004 MN4), it is often nicknamed ‘the doomsday asteroid’ in popular
media, after initial observations made after its discovery in 2004 gave it a
2.7% chance of striking Earth in April 2029.
With additional data, however, an impact in 2029
was soon ruled out, although the asteroid will pass within 36 000 km of Earth’s
surface, closer even than the orbits of geostationary satellites.
The asteroid will return to Earth’s
neighbourhood again in 2036, but quite how close it will come then is
uncertain, as the 2029 approach is predicted to alter its orbit substantially.
Obtaining improved physical parameters for Apophis and its orbit is thus of
great importance in being able to make better predictions of its future
trajectory.
Herschel had a good opportunity at the weekend,
observing the asteroid for about two hours on its approach to Earth, ahead of
today’s closest encounter at a little less than one tenth of the distance from
Earth to the Sun: about 14.5 million km. The observations were made as part of
Herschel’s Guaranteed Time Programme MACH‑11.
“As well as the data being scientifically
important in their own right, understanding key properties of asteroids will
provide vital details for missions that might eventually visit potentially
hazardous objects,” says Laurence O'Rourke, Principal Investigator of the
MACH-11 observing programme, from the European Space Astronomy Centre (ESAC),
near Madrid, Spain.
“Apophis is only the second near-Earth asteroid
observed by Herschel, and these were the fastest tracked observations by the
space telescope – the asteroid moved at a rate of 205 arcseconds per hour as
seen from Herschel’s viewpoint.”
Herschel provided the first thermal infrared observations
of Apophis at different wavelengths, which together with optical measurements
helped refine estimates of the asteroid’s properties. Previous estimates
bracketed the asteroid’s average diameter at 270 ± 60 m; the new Herschel
observations returned a more precise diameter of 325 ± 15 m.
“The 20% increase in diameter, from 270 to 325
m, translates into a 75% increase in our estimates of the asteroid’s volume or
mass,” says Thomas Müller of the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial
Physics in Garching, Germany, who is leading the analysis of the new data.
By analysing the heat emitted by Apophis,
Herschel also provided a new estimate of the asteroid’s albedo – a measure of
its reflectivity – of 0.23. This value means that 23% of the sunlight falling
onto the asteroid is reflected; the rest is absorbed and heats up the asteroid.
The previous albedo estimate for Apophis was 0.33.
Knowing the thermal properties of an asteroid
indicates how its orbit might be altered due to subtle heating by the Sun.
Known as the Yarkovsky effect, the heating and cooling cycle of a small body as
it rotates and as its distance from the Sun changes can instigate long-term
changes to the asteroid’s orbit.
“These numbers are first estimates based on the
Herschel measurements alone, and other ongoing ground-based campaigns might
produce additional pieces of information which will allow us to improve our
results,” adds Müller.
“Although Apophis initially caught public
interest as a possible Earth impactor, which is now considered highly
improbable for the foreseeable future, it is of considerable interest in its
own right, and as an example of the class of Near Earth Objects,” says Göran
Pilbratt, ESA’s Herschel Project Scientist.
“Our unique Herschel measurements play a key
role for the physical characterisation of Apophis, and will improve the
long-term prediction of its orbit.”
Original Source: European Space Agency


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