The Jerusalem Post

Israeli research reveal Martian roots in asteroid family

- • By JUDY SIEGEL

Researcher­s at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot and the Côte d’Azur Observator­y in France are proposing a new and unique origin for Mars Trojan asteroids, which travel along the planet’s orbital path around the Sun, and are not quite like those that populate the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

Their findings, just published in Nature Physics, suggest that they were most likely born in a giant impact with the Red Planet.

There are a great number of asteroids in our solar system, especially in the region known as the asteroid belt. These objects are generally assumed to be leftovers from the solar system’s formation that did not manage to form a planet. Mostly, it has been presumed that the Mars Trojans were rocks from the asteroid belt that had wandered into particular places within the path of Mars’s orbit known as the Lagrange points – unusual positions in which objects remain locked into the orbit of a planet.

To investigat­e the origins of the seven asteroids in one of Mars’s Lagrange points, Dr. David Polishook, a postdoctor­al fellow in Prof. Oded Aharonson’s group at Weizmann, and Dr. Seth Jacobson of the Côte d’Azur Observator­y first used the SpeX instrument on the IRTF telescope in Hawaii to spectrally infer their compositio­n. “Our observatio­ns showed that all these asteroids are rich in a mineral known as olivine, implying they are all related. They represent a family with a single common origin,” said Polishook.

Olivine-rich asteroids are rare in the asteroid belt; this mineral generally forms deep within the mantles of much larger planetary bodies such as Earth and Mars, where pressures are high.

To explain this finding, Polishook and his colleagues suggested that the Trojan asteroids had not formed along with the rest of the asteroid belt. The most likely explanatio­n for the asteroids being both rich in olivine and locked in one of Mars’s Lagrange points is that they were excavated from deep within Mars and ejected into orbit by a giant impact.

To test this hypothesis, the scientists developed a computer simulation that shows how such an impact could have created the asteroids and how they may have been captured in their particular Lagrange point in the orbital path of Mars. “For the first time,” said Polishook, “we were able to draw a link between specific asteroids and a planetary source. Now that we know such objects exist, the next step is to investigat­e their abundance and study their characteri­stics.”

“Since olivine comes from the planetary mantle beneath the outer surface, the material in these asteroids could provide a unique opportunit­y to study the inner makeup of Mars,” added Aharonson. “They may serve as targets for future exploratio­n; sampling them could prove more feasible than retrieving material from Mars itself.”

 ?? (Panaxia) ?? PANAXIA PHARMACEUT­ICAL provides its customers in New Mexico and elsewhere with medical cannabis in many forms, including cannabis oil.
(Panaxia) PANAXIA PHARMACEUT­ICAL provides its customers in New Mexico and elsewhere with medical cannabis in many forms, including cannabis oil.
 ?? (Nasa.gov) ?? THE MARS TROJAN asteroids were likely born during a giant impact with the Red Planet, according to the researcher­s.
(Nasa.gov) THE MARS TROJAN asteroids were likely born during a giant impact with the Red Planet, according to the researcher­s.

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