A Fireball and Potentially Hazardous Binary Near-Earth Asteroid (164121) 2003 YT$_1$
Toshihiro Kasuga, Mikiya Sato, Masayoshi Ueda, Yasunori Fujiwara, Chie, Tsuchiya, Jun-ichi Watanabe

TL;DR
This paper reports a fireball observation linked to the binary near-Earth asteroid 2003 YT1, providing insights into its dust production mechanisms and potential hazard implications.
Contribution
It identifies a likely connection between a fireball and asteroid 2003 YT1, and analyzes possible dust ejection processes relevant to asteroid hazard assessment.
Findings
The fireball's orbit closely matches 2003 YT1's orbit.
Rotational instability likely causes dust ejection from the asteroid.
Micrometeorite impacts may trigger release of larger particles.
Abstract
We present a fireball detected in the night sky over Kyoto, Japan on UT 2017 April 28 at by the SonotaCo Network. The absolute visual magnitude is =4.100.42mag. Luminous light curves obtain a meteoroid mass =291g, corresponding to the size =2.70.1cm. Orbital similarity assessed by D-criterions (cf. =0.0079) has identified a likely parent, the binary near-Earth asteroid (164121) 2003 YT. The suggested binary formation process is a YORP-driven rotational disintegration (Pravec & Harris 2007). The asynchronous state indicates the age of 10yr, near or shorter than the upper limit to meteoroid stream lifetime. We examine potential dust production mechanisms for the asteroid, including rotational instability, resurfacing, impact, photoionization, radiation pressure sweeping, thermal fracture and…
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