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      The strength of regolith and rubble pile asteroids

      1 , 2
      Meteoritics & Planetary Science
      Wiley

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          Radiative Spin-up and Spin-down of Small Asteroids

          D Rubincam (2000)
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            Rotational breakup as the origin of small binary asteroids

            Asteroids with satellites are observed throughout the Solar System, from subkilometre near-Earth asteroid pairs to systems of large and distant bodies in the Kuiper belt. The smallest and closest systems are found among the near-Earth and small inner main-belt asteroids, which typically have rapidly rotating primaries and close secondaries on circular orbits. About 15 per cent of near-Earth and main-belt asteroids with diameters under 10 km have satellites. The mechanism that forms such similar binaries in these two dynamically different populations was hitherto unclear. Here we show that these binaries are created by the slow spinup of a 'rubble pile' asteroid by means of the thermal YORP (Yarkovsky-O'Keefe-Radzievskii-Paddack) effect. We find that mass shed from the equator of a critically spinning body accretes into a satellite if the material is collisionally dissipative and the primary maintains a low equatorial elongation. The satellite forms mostly from material originating near the primary's surface and enters into a close, low-eccentricity orbit. The properties of binaries produced by our model match those currently observed in the small near-Earth and main-belt asteroid populations, including 1999 KW(4) (refs 3, 4).
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              Collisions and gravitational reaccumulation: forming asteroid families and satellites.

              Numerical simulations of the collisional disruption of large asteroids show that although the parent body is totally shattered, subsequent gravitational reaccumulation leads to the formation of an entire family of large and small objects with dynamical properties similar to those of the parent body. Simulations were performed in two different collisional regimes representative of asteroid families such as Eunomia and Koronis. Our results indicate that all large family members must be made of gravitationally reaccumulated fragments; that the post-collision member size distribution and the orbital dispersion are steeper and smaller, respectively, than for the evolved families observed today; and that satellites form frequently around family members.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Meteoritics & Planetary Science
                Meteorit Planet Sci
                Wiley
                10869379
                May 2014
                May 2014
                May 13 2014
                : 49
                : 5
                : 788-811
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Aerospace Engineering Sciences; University of Colorado; Boulder Colorado USA
                [2 ]Engineering Sciences Colorado, The Center for Astrodynamics Research; The University of Colorado at Boulder; Boulder Colorado USA
                Article
                10.1111/maps.12293
                6c536531-5f32-4a6b-8bc3-98541f5b0483
                © 2014

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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