4 Vesta

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Template:Minor Planet 4 Vesta (ves'-ta) is the third-largest asteroid in the Main belt, between 530 and 468 km in diameter. This and the unusually bright surface make Vesta the brightest asteroid. It is the only asteroid sometimes visible to the naked eye.

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 other asteroids were discovered for 38 years; the next was 5 Astraea.

Physical characteristics

File:4 Vesta (HST).png
4 Vesta seen by the Hubble Space Telescope in May 1996 from 177 Gm

In the earliest times of the Solar system, Vesta was hot enough for its interior to melt. This resulted in differentiation of the asteroid. It is likely to have a layered structure: a metallic iron-nickel core and an overlying olivine mantle. The surface is basaltic rock from ancient lava flows, obviously some kind of short-lived volcanic activity was present. This makes Vesta unlike any other asteroid and in a sense it is more like the terrestrial planets, which underwent similar geological processes.

However, it was not the only one of its kind; originally, there may have been dozens of similar large planetesimals, but all the other bodies were shattered into families of smaller asteroids during the chaotic early times. Metallic iron-nickel asteroids are thought to originate from the cores of such bodies, with stony asteroids deriving from their crusts and mantles.

Not even Vesta has survived intact. In 1996 the Hubble Space Telescope (see image below) detected a huge Vestian crater, 430 kilometres across and perhaps a billion years old. It is thought that this crater may be the source of the small V-type asteroids (or Vestoids) observed today.

In 2001 one such asteroid, 1929 Kollaa, was not only determined to be a piece from Vesta, but also the location of its formation was traced to deep in the crust.

The Yarkovsky effect, along with perturbing planets and asteroids, causes scattering among the Vestian family. Some family members, such as 9969 Braille, have become Near-Earth asteroids. Smaller fragments have even rained down as meteorites; Vesta is thought to be the source of the HED meteorites.

Our knowledge about Vesta is expected to increase tremendously when the Dawn probe enters orbit around the asteroid for nine months in 2010-2011.

File:1 Ceres, 2 Pallas, 4 Vesta and 10 Hygiea.png
The four largest asteroids. Top: 1 Ceres and 2 Pallas. Bottom: 4 Vesta and 10 Hygiea

Aspects

Conjunction to sun Stationary, retrorad Opposition Stationary, prograd
May 11th, 2005 November 19th, 2005 January 6th, 2006 February 23rd, 2006
September 11th, 2006 April 19th, 2007 May 31st, 2007 July 15th, 2007
February 21st, 2008 September 13rd, 2008 October 30rd, 2008 December 20th, 2008
June 22nd, 2009 January 8th, 2010 February 18th, 2010 April 8th, 2010
November 11th, 2010 June 26th, 2011 August 6th, 2011 September 19th, 2011
April 10th, 2012 October 21st, 2012 December 9th, 2012 January 28th, 2013
August 7th, 2013 March 7th, 2014 April 15th, 2014 June 3rd, 2014
January 13th, 2015 August 16th, 2015 September 30th, 2015 November 19th, 2015
May 24th, 2016 December 3rd, 2016 January 19th, 2017 March 8th, 2017
September 29th, 2017 May 11th, 2018 June 22nd, 2018 August 4th, 2018
March 9th, 2019 September 26th, 2019 November 13th, 2019 January 3rd, 2020
July 6th, 2020 January 25th, 2021 March 6th, 2021 April 24th, 2021

References

External links


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