Hubble Space Telescope Observations of Active Asteroid 324P/La Sagra
David Jewitt, Jessica Agarwal, Harold Weaver, Max Mutchler, Jing Li, and Stephen Larson

TL;DR
Hubble observations of active asteroid 324P/La Sagra reveal ongoing sublimation-driven mass loss, with implications for its activity mechanism, lifetime, and classification as a temporarily active icy asteroid.
Contribution
This study provides detailed measurements of dust ejection, mass loss rates, and activity duration, offering new insights into sublimation processes in main-belt comets.
Findings
Mass loss rate of ~0.2 kg/s due to sublimation.
Dust ejection velocities less than 1 m/s perpendicular to the orbital plane.
Estimated lifetime of activity around 10^5 years.
Abstract
Hubble Space Telescope observations of active asteroid 324P/La Sagra near perihelion show continued mass loss consistent with the sublimation of near-surface ice. Isophotes of the coma measured from a vantage point below the orbital plane are best matched by steady emission of particles having a nominal size 100 m. The inferred rate of mass loss, 0.2 kg s, can be supplied by sublimation of water ice in thermal equilibrium with sunlight from an area as small as 930 m, corresponding to about 0.2\% of the nucleus surface. Observations taken from a vantage point only 0.6\degr~from the orbital plane of 324P set a limit to the velocity of ejection of dust in the direction perpendicular to the plane, 1 m s. Short-term photometric variations of the near-nucleus region, if related to rotation of the underlying nucleus, rule out periods…
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