P/2010A2 LINEAR - I: An impact in the Asteroid Main Belt
O. R. Hainaut, J. Kleyna, G. Sarid, B. Hermalyn, A. Zenn, K. J. Meech,, P. H. Schultz, H. Hsieh, G. Trancho, J. Pittichov\'a, B. Yang

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin of P/2010A2 LINEAR, concluding it resulted from an oblique impact event rather than sublimation or other mechanisms, based on detailed observational and modeling analyses of its dust tail and nucleus.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis linking the dust tail structure of P/2010A2 LINEAR to an impact event, ruling out other mechanisms like sublimation or electrostatic levitation.
Findings
Dust tail formed by a single impact burst
Dust grains range from 1 to 20 mm in size
Estimated impactor produced a crater ~100 m in radius
Abstract
Comet P/2010A2 LINEAR is a good candidate for membership with the Main Belt Comet family. It was observed with several telescopes (ESO NTT, La Silla; Gemini North, Mauna Kea; UH 2.2m, Mauna Kea) from 14 Jan. until 19 Feb. 2010 in order to characterize and monitor it and its very unusual dust tail, which appears almost fully detached from the nucleus; the head of the tail includes two narrow arcs forming a cross. The immediate surroundings of the nucleus were found dust-free, which allowed an estimate of the nucleus radius of 80-90m. A model of the thermal evolution indicates that such a small nucleus could not maintain any ice content for more than a few million years on its current orbit, ruling out ice sublimation dust ejection mechanism. Rotational spin-up and electrostatic dust levitations were also rejected, leaving an impact with a smaller body as the favoured hypothesis, and…
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