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Questions not answers from asteroid image

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only
by Staff Writers
Paris (UPI) Aug 11, 2010
A European space probe has captured stunning images of a space rock that raise more questions about asteroids than they answer, scientists say.

Unique angles and strange surface features of the asteroid Lutetia were photographed by the European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft in a flyby recently, SPACE.com reported Tuesday.

Lutetia, at about 62 miles wide, is the largest asteroid yet visited by a spacecraft -- and a strange one, scientists say.

"I've never seen anything like it," Claudia Alexander, project scientist for the U.S. Rosetta Project, says. "It looked as though it could have been fractured off of a mother asteroid -- it was all angles and flat planes, ancient impacts overlaid by newer ones, covered by dust of some kind."

The surface of Lutetia also looks odd, she says, as if large boulders had been rolling over it.

"If that is indeed what we're seeing, the question becomes: What could have caused the rolling?" Alexander said. "Perhaps the asteroid spun up, spun down or experienced some orbital irregularity. It's not clear right now that the asteroid is subject to the forces that could cause these things."

Astronomers have been studied Lutetia -- of the largest asteroids in the solar system -- for years. It reflects light in a pattern unlike any other asteroid that has been studied, they say.

"Right now we have more questions than answers," Alexander said. "We can only speculate at this point about what we're seeing in the pictures."



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IRON AND ICE
NASA pondering mission to study asteroid
Washington (UPI) Aug 10, 2010
NASA says it is considering a mission to land a probe on an asteroid that could hit the Earth in two centuries to learn more about its possible path. An analysis of the orbit of asteroid 1999 RQ36 says it will come closest to hitting Earth - scientists put the odds at 1-in-1,000 - in the year 2182, but researchers want to collect a sample of the rock to help forecast its trajectory mo ... read more







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