New mystery arises about asteroid Phaethon

The light reflected from the surface of the new-Earth asteroid is much different from what astronomers previously thought

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3200 Phaethon has been shown to be the parent body of the Geminid meteor shower.. Image credit: NAOJ

Based on a new study of how near-Earth asteroid Phaethon reflects light at different angles, astronomers think that its surface may reflect less light than previously thought. This is an exciting mystery for the recently approved DESTINY+ mission to investigate when it flies past Phaethon.

The way an object reflects light depends not only on its albedo (the percentage of light it reflects) but also on the illumination angle. One particular effect that scientists are interested in is how the polarisation changes when sunlight reflects off the surface of an asteroid. Scientifically, light is referred to as electromagnetic waves; the waves create changes in the electric and magnetic fields. The directions of these changes can either be random or aligned. When the electromagnetic effects of light are aligned, the light is said to be polarised.

An international team, including astronomers from the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ), Seoul National University, Chiba Institute of Technology, and other institutes, used the 1.6-metre Pirka Telescope at Nayoro Observatory in Hokkaido, Japan to observe the near-Earth asteroid 3200 Phaethon. They studied the changes in the polarisation of the light it reflected at many different illumination angles. The results show that at some angles, the light reflected from Phaethon is the most polarised light ever observed among small bodies in the Solar System.

Discovered in 1983, Phaethon has been shown to be the parent body of the Geminid meteor shower. Most meteor-shower parent bodies are comets, but Phaethon doesn’t show typical cometary activity. Instead it is an active asteroid with confirmed dust ejections. It also has a surprisingly blue colour. The fact that its reflected light is strongly polarised is one more mystery surrounding this curious asteroid.

DESTINY+ is scheduled to launch in 2022 and will study the asteroid 3200 Phaethon’s surface geology. Image credit: JAXA

One possible explanation for the strong polarisation is that the surface of Phaethon might be darker than expected. Asteroid surfaces are covered with loose rubble. When light reflected by the rough surface strikes another part of the surface and is reflected again before being reflected towards the observer, these multiple scatterings randomise the polarisation. Dr. Ito from NAOJ, a leader of the research team explains, “If the albedo is lower than previously thought, that would reduce the effectiveness of multiple scatterings; so that strongly polarised light that has only been reflected a single time would dominate.”

Other possibilities that could reduce the effectiveness of multiple scatterings are that the rubble covering Phaethon’s surface might be composed of larger grains, or the material may be more porous than expected. A possible mechanism to produces large grains is sintering. The surface of Phaethon can be heated up to 1000 degrees Celsius (1800 degrees Fahrenheit) during its closest passage to the Sun. Such extreme heating can cause sintering on an asteroid’s surface, resulting in coarser grains.

The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency’s DESTINY+ probe, scheduled to launch in 2022, will take pictures as it flies by Phaethon to help astronomers better characterise its surface geology.

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