The impact and recovery of asteroid 2018 LA
Peter Jenniskens, Mohutsiwa Gabadirwe, Qing-Zhu Yin, Alexander Proyer,, Oliver Moses, Tomas Kohout, Fulvio Franchi, Roger L. Gibson, Richard, Kowalski, Eric J. Christensen, Alex R. Gibbs, Aren Heinze, Larry Denneau,, Davide Farnocchia, Paul W. Chodas, William Gray, Marco Micheli

TL;DR
This study details the recovery and analysis of meteorites from asteroid 2018 LA's impact, refining its orbit, physical properties, and origin, and providing insights into its impact history and source.
Contribution
It presents the first recovery of meteorites from asteroid 2018 LA and refines its orbit, physical characteristics, and origin, linking it to Vesta and its impact history.
Findings
23 meteorites recovered, classified as HED polymict breccia.
Asteroid 2018 LA had a diameter of about 156 cm and high density.
Orbit suggests origin from Vesta and impact occurred ~23 million years ago.
Abstract
The June 2, 2018, impact of asteroid 2018 LA over Botswana is only the second asteroid detected in space prior to impacting over land. Here, we report on the successful recovery of meteorites. Additional astrometric data refine the approach orbit and define the spin period and shape of the asteroid. Video observations of the fireball constrain the asteroid's position in its orbit and were used to triangulate the location of the fireball's main flare over the Central Kalahari Game Reserve. 23 meteorites were recovered. A consortium study of eight of these classifies Motopi Pan as a HED polymict breccia derived from howardite, cumulate and basaltic eucrite, and diogenite lithologies. Before impact, 2018 LA was a solid rock of about 156 cm diameter with high bulk density about 2.85 g/cm3, a relatively low albedo pV about 0.25, no significant opposition effect on the asteroid brightness,…
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.
