The Nucleus of Active Asteroid 311P/(2013 P5) PANSTARRS
David Jewitt, Harold Weaver, Max Mutchler, Jing Li, Jessica Agarwal,, Stephen Larson

TL;DR
This study used Hubble observations to investigate asteroid 311P/PANSTARRS, suggesting it is likely a close binary system with components near rotational breakup, explaining its dust ejection behavior.
Contribution
First direct measurement indicating 311P may be a binary asteroid with components near the rotational breakup limit.
Findings
Lightcurve period is at least 5.4 hours, not indicating rapid rotation.
Evidence suggests 311P is a binary system with a secondary/primary mass ratio of about 1:6.
No large fragments were found beyond 10 meters radius, implying recent breakup or ongoing activity.
Abstract
The unique inner-belt asteroid 311P/PANSTARRS (formerly P/2013 P5) is notable for its sporadic, comet-like ejection of dust in nine distinct epochs spread over 250 days in 2013. This curious behavior has been interpreted as the product of localized, equator-ward landsliding from the surface of an asteroid rotating at the brink of instability. We obtained new Hubble Space Telescope observations to directly measure the nucleus and to search for evidence of its rapid rotation. However, instead of providing photometric evidence for rapid nucleus rotation, our data set a lower limit to the lightcurve period, 5.4 hour. The dominant feature of the lightcurve is a V-shaped minimum, 0.3 magnitudes deep, that is suggestive of an eclipsing binary. Under this interpretation, the time-series data are consistent with a secondary/primary mass ratio, 1:6, a ratio of…
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