Multiband Optical Observation of P/2010 A2 Dust Tail
Junhan Kim, Masateru Ishiguro, Hidekazu Hanayama, Sunao Hasegawa,, Fumihiko Usui, Kenshi Yanagisawa, Yuki Sarugaku, Jun-ichi Watanabe,, Michitoshi Yoshida

TL;DR
This study presents multiband optical observations of asteroid P/2010 A2's dust tail, revealing its spectral properties suggest a collisional origin with fresh chondritic material, challenging previous ice sublimation hypotheses.
Contribution
First multiband optical observation of P/2010 A2's dust tail, providing spectral evidence supporting a collision origin over sublimation.
Findings
Reflectance spectrum resembles Sq-type asteroid or ordinary chondrites.
Spectral data suggests the parent body was originally S-type but shattered.
Results support a collisional origin for the dust tail.
Abstract
An inner main-belt asteroid, P/2010 A2, was discovered on January 6th, 2010. Based on its orbital elements, it is considered that the asteroid belongs to the Flora collisional family, where S-type asteroids are common, whilst showing a comet-like dust tail. Although analysis of images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope and Rosetta spacecraft suggested that the dust tail resulted from a recent head-on collision between asteroids (Jewitt et al. 2010; Snodgrass et al. 2010), an alternative idea of ice sublimation was suggested based on the morphological fitting of ground-based images (Moreno et al. 2010). Here, we report a multiband observation of P/2010 A2 made on January 2010 with a 105 cm telescope at the Ishigakijima Astronomical Observatory. Three broadband filters, , , and , were employed for the observation. The unique multiband data reveals that the reflectance…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
