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      Ejecta from the DART-produced active asteroid Dimorphos

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          Abstract

          Some active asteroids have been proposed to be the result of impact events. Because active asteroids are generally discovered serendipitously only after their tail formation, the process of the impact ejecta evolving into a tail has never been directly observed. NASA's Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission, apart from having successfully changed the orbital period of Dimorphos, demonstrated the activation process of an asteroid from an impact under precisely known impact conditions. Here we report the observations of the DART impact ejecta with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) from impact time T+15 minutes to T+18.5 days at spatial resolutions of ~2.1 km per pixel. Our observations reveal a complex evolution of ejecta, which is first dominated by the gravitational interaction between the Didymos binary system and the ejected dust and later by solar radiation pressure. The lowest-speed ejecta dispersed via a sustained tail that displayed a consistent morphology with previously observed asteroid tails thought to be produced by impact. The ejecta evolution following DART's controlled impact experiment thus provides a framework for understanding the fundamental mechanisms acting on asteroids disrupted by natural impact.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          02 March 2023
          Article
          10.1038/s41586-023-05811-4
          2303.01700
          93af4b94-15c3-4fc7-8945-5a577a4159ce

          http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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          Custom metadata
          accepted by Nature
          astro-ph.EP

          Planetary astrophysics
          Planetary astrophysics

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