The Ginger-shaped Asteroid 4179 Toutatis: New Observations from a Successful Flyby of Chang'e-2
/ Authors
Jiangchuan Huang, J. Ji, Peijian Ye, Xiaolei Wang, Jun Yan, L. Meng, Su Wang, Chunlai Li, Yuan Li, D. Qiao
and 19 more authors
Wei Zhao, Yuhui Zhao, T. Zhang, Peng Liu, Yun Jiang, W. Rao, Shenghao Li, Changning Huang, W. Ip, Shoucun Hu, Menghua Zhu, Liangliang Yu, Yongliao Zou, Xianglong Tang, Jianyang Li, Haibin Zhao, Hao Huang, Xiao-jun Jiang, J. Bai
/ Abstract
On 13 December 2012, Chang'e-2 conducted a successful flyby of the near-Earth asteroid 4179 Toutatis at a closest distance of 770 ± 120 meters from the asteroid's surface. The highest-resolution image, with a resolution of better than 3 meters, reveals new discoveries on the asteroid, e.g., a giant basin at the big end, a sharply perpendicular silhouette near the neck region and direct evidence of boulders and regolith, which suggests that Toutatis may bear a rubble-pile structure. Toutatis' maximum physical length and width are (4.75 × 1.95 km) ±10%, respectively and the direction of the +z axis is estimated to be (250 ± 5°, 63 ± 5°) with respect to the J2000 ecliptic coordinate system. The bifurcated configuration is indicative of a contact binary origin for Toutatis, which is composed of two lobes (head and body). Chang'e-2 observations have significantly improved our understanding of the characteristics, formation and evolution of asteroids in general.
Journal: Scientific Reports
DOI: 10.1038/srep03411