Binary asteroid

Binary asteroid 243 Ida with its small minor-planet moon, Dactyl, as seen by Galileo
Binary near-Earth asteroid 65803 Didymos and its moon Dimorphos imaged by the Double Asteroid Redirection Test spacecraft

A binary asteroid is a system of two asteroids orbiting their common barycenter. The binary nature of 243 Ida was discovered when the Galileo spacecraft flew by the asteroid in 1993. Since then numerous binary asteroids and several triple asteroids have been detected.[1]

The mass ratio of the two components – called the "primary" and "secondary" of a binary system – is an important characteristic. Most binary asteroids have a large mass ratio, i.e. a relatively small satellite in orbit around the main component. Systems with a small minor-planet moon – also called "companion" or simply "satellite" – include 87 Sylvia, 107 Camilla, 45 Eugenia, 121 Hermione, 130 Elektra, 22 Kalliope, 283 Emma, 379 Huenna, 243 Ida and 4337 Arecibo (in order of decreasing primary size). Some binary systems have a mass ratio near unity, i.e., two components of similar mass. They include 90 Antiope, 2006 VW139, 2017 YE5 and 69230 Hermes, with average component diameters of 86, 1.8, 0.9 and 0.8 km, respectively.

  1. ^ Margot, Jean-Luc; Pravec, Petr; Taylor, Patrick; Carry, Benoît; Jacobson, Seth (2015). "Asteroid Systems: Binaries, Triples, and Pairs". In Michel, Patrick; DeMeo, Francesca E.; Bottke, William F. (eds.). Asteroids IV. p. 355. arXiv:1504.00034. Bibcode:2015aste.book..355M. doi:10.2458/azu_uapress_9780816532131-ch019. ISBN 9780816532131. S2CID 56278100.

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