4 Vesta (ves'-tə (Pronunciation respelling key), IPA ) is the second most massive asteroid in the asteroid belt, with a mean diameter of about 530 km and an estimated mass of 9% the mass of the entire asteroid belt. Its size and unusually bright surface make Vesta the brightest asteroid, and the only one ever visible to the naked eye from Earth, apart from 1 Ceres under exceptional viewing conditions. Due to the availability of rock samples in the form of the HED meteorites, it has also been the most studied.
Discovery
Vesta was discovered by the
German astronomer Heinrich Wilhelm Olbers on
March 29,
1807. He allowed the prominent
mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss to name the asteroid after the
Roman virgin
goddess of home and hearth,
Vesta.
After the discovery of Vesta in 1807, no further asteroids were discovered for 38 years. During this time the four known asteroids were counted among the planets, and each had its own planetary symbol. Vesta's symbol is a stylized hearth (see at top right of article).
Physical characteristics
Vesta is the second-largest
asteroid, and the largest in the Inner Main Belt, which lies interior to the
Kirkwood gap at 2.50 AU. It is similar to
2 Pallas in volume (to within uncertainty), but significantly more massive.
Vesta's shape appears to be that of a gravitationally relaxed equilibrium
oblate spheroid, or "planetary body"
[5].
Its rotation is very fast for an asteroid (having a 5.342 hour day) and prograde, with the north pole pointing in the direction of right ascension 20 h 32 min, declination +48° with an uncertainty of about 10°. This gives an axial tilt of 29° [5].
Temperatures on the surface have been estimated to lie between about -20°C with the Sun overhead, dropping to about -190°C at the winter pole. Typical day-time and night-time temperatures are -60°C and -130°C, respectively. This estimate is for May 6, 1996, very close to perihelion, while details vary somewhat with seasons *.
Geology
For Vesta, uniquely among all the asteroids, there is a large collection of samples accessible to scientists, in the form of over 200
HED meteorites. This has allowed insight into Vesta's geologic history and structure.
Vesta is thought to consist of a metallic iron-nickel core, an overlying rocky olivine mantle, with a surface crust. From the first appearance of Ca-Al-rich inclusions (the first solid matter in the Solar System, forming about 4570 million years ago), a likely timeline is as follows [6][7][8]:
- accretion completed after about 2-3 million years.
- Complete or almost complete melting due to radioactive decay of 26Al, leading to separation of the metal core at about 4-5 million years.
- Progressive crystallization of a convecting molten mantle. Convection stopped when about 80% of the material had crystallized, at about 6-7 million years.
- Extrusion of the remaining molten material to form the crust. Either as basaltic lavas in progressive eruptions, or possibly forming a short-lived magma ocean.
- The deeper layers of the crust crystallize to form plutonic rocks, while older basalts are metamorphosed due to the pressure of newer surface layers.
- Slow cooling of the interior.
Vesta is the only intact asteroid that has been resurfaced in this manner, and thus the only one to have undergone planetary differentiation. However, the presence of iron meteorites and achondritic meteorite classes without identified parent bodies indicates that there once were other differentiated planetesimals with igneous histories, which have since been shattered by impacts.
Vesta's crust is reasoned to consist of (in order of increasing depth) [9]:
On the basis of the sizes of V-type asteroids (thought to be pieces of Vesta's crust ejected during large impacts), and the depth of the south polar crater (see below), the crust is thought to be roughly 10 km thick.
Surface features
Some Vestian surface features have been resolved using the Hubble Space Telescope and ground based telescopes, e.g. the Keck Telescope.
The most prominent surface feature is an enormous crater 460 km in diameter centered near the south pole [5]. Its width is 80% of the entire diameter of Vesta. The floor of this crater is about 13 km below, and its rim rises 4-12 km above the surrounding terrain, with total surface relief of about 25 km. A central peak rises 18 km above the crater floor. It is estimated that the impact responsible excavated about 1% of the entire volume of Vesta, and it is likely that the Vesta family and V-type asteroids are the products of this collision. If this is the case, then the fact that 10 km fragments of the Vesta family and V-type asteroids have survived bombardment until the present indicates that the crater is only about 1 billion years old or younger [10]. It would also be the original site of origin of the HED meteorites. In fact, all the known V-type asteroids taken together account for only about 6% of the ejected volume, with the rest presumably either in small fragments, ejected by approaching the 3:1 Kirkwood gap, or perturbed away by the Yarkovsky effect or radiation pressure. Spectroscopic analyses of the Hubble images [10] have shown that this crater has penetrated deep through several distinct layers of the crust, and possibly into the mantle which is indicated by spectral signatures of olivine.
Interestingly Vesta was not disrupted nor resurfaced by an impact of this magnitude.
Several other large craters about 150 km wide and 7 km deep are also present. A dark albedo feature about 200 km across has been named Olbers in honour of Vesta's discoverer, but it does not appear in elevation maps as a fresh crater would, and its nature is presently unknown, perhaps an old basaltic surface[11]. It serves as a reference point with the 0° longitude prime meridian defined to pass through its center.
The eastern and western hemispheres show markedly different terrains. From preliminary spectral analyses of the Hubble Space Telescope images [10], the eastern hemisphere appears to be some kind of high albedo, heavily cratered "highland" terrain with aged regolith, and craters probing into deeper plutonic layers of the crust. On the other hand, large regions of the western hemisphere are taken up by dark geologic units thought to be surface basalts, perhaps analogous to the lunar maria.
Fragments
Various small solar system objects are believed to be fragments of Vesta caused by collisions. The Vestoid asteroids and HED meteorites are examples. The V-type asteroid 1929 Kollaa has been determined to have a composition akin to cumulate eucrite meteorites, indicating its origin deep within Vesta's crust [12].
Because a number of meteorites are believed to be Vestian fragments, Vesta is currently one of only five identified Solar system bodies for which we have physical samples, the others being Mars, the Moon, comet Wild 2, and Earth itself.
Exploration
The first space mission to Vesta will be NASA's Dawn probe, which will enter orbit around the asteroid for nine months in 2010-2011.
Aspects
A table with the aspects (opposition, conjunction to sun, etc.) of 4 Vesta from 2005 to 2020.
| Stationary, retrograde | Opposition | Distance to Earth (AU) | Maximum brightness (mag) | Stationary, prograde | Conjunction to Sun
|
| November 19, 2005 | January 6, 2006 | 1.55042 | 6.2 | February 23, 2006 | May 11, 2005
|
| April 19, 2007 | May 31, 2007 | 1.14003 | 5.4 | July 15, 2007 | September 11, 2006
|
| September 13, 2008 | October 30, 2008 | 1.54136 | 6.5 | December 20, 2008 | February 21, 2008
|
| January 8, 2010 | February 18, 2010 | 1.40719 | 6.1 | April 8, 2010 | June 22, 2009
|
| June 26, 2011 | August 6, 2011 | 1.22987 | 5.6 | September 19, 2011 | November 11, 2010
|
| October 21, 2012 | December 9, 2012 | 1.58942 | 6.4 | January 28, 2013 | April 10, 2012
|
| March 7, 2014 | April 15, 2014 | 1.21837 | 5.7 | June 3, 2014 | August 7, 2013
|
| August 16, 2015 | September 30, 2015 | 1.43731 | 6.2 | November 19, 2015 | January 13, 2015
|
| December 3, 2016 | January 19, 2017 | 1.51465 | 6.2 | March 8, 2017 | May 24, 2016
|
| May 11, 2018 | June 22, 2018 | 1.14132 | 5.3 | August 4, 2018 | September 29, 2017
|
| September 26, 2019 | November 13, 2019 | 1.57063 | 6.5 | January 3, 2020 | March 9, 2019
|
| January 25, 2021 | March 6, 2021 | 1.34751 | 6.0 | April 24, 2021 | July 6, 2020
|
References
-
- Supplemental IRAS Minor Planet Survey
-
P. C. Thomas et al Impact excavation on asteroid 4 Vesta: Hubble Space Telescope results, Science, Vol. 277, pp. 1492 (1997).
P. C. Thomas et al Vesta: Spin Pole, Size, and Shape from HST Images, Icarus, Vol. 128, p. 88 (1997).
A. Ghosh and H. Y. McSween A Thermal Model for the Differentiation of Asteroid 4 Vesta, Based on Radiogenic Heating, Icarus, Vol. 134, p. 187 (1998).
-
-
-
R. P. Binzel et al Geologic Mapping of Vesta from 1994 Hubble Space Telescope Images, Icarus, Vol. 128, p. 95 (1997).
B. J. Zellner et al Hubble Space Telescope Images of Asteroid Vesta in 1994, Icarus, Vol. 128, p. 83 (1997).
M. S. Kelley et al Quantified mineralogical evidence for a common origin of 1929 Kollaa with 4 Vesta and the HED meteorites, Icarus, Vol. 165, p. 215 (2003).
- K. Keil, Geological History of Asteroid 4 Vesta: The Smallest Terrestrial Planet in Asteroids III, William Bottke, Alberto Cellino, Paolo Paolicchi, and Richard P. Binzel, (Editors), Univ. of Arizona Press (2002), ISBN 0816522812
External links
See also
Vesta asteroids | Asteroids named from Roman mythology | V-type asteroids
Vesta (Asteroid) | 4 Веста | (4) Vesta | Vesta (planetka) | Vesta (Asteroid) | (4) Vesta | (4) Vesta | 4 Vesta | 4 베스타 | 4 Vesta | 4 Vesta | 4 Vesta | 4 Vesta | Vesta (planetoïde) | ベスタ (小惑星) | 4 Vesta | 4 Westa | 4 Vesta | Веста (астероид) | 4 Vesta | 4 Vesta | 4 Vesta | 灶神星