The Excited Spin State of Dimorphos Resulting from the DART Impact
Harrison F. Agrusa (1), Ioannis Gkolias (2), Kleomenis Tsiganis (2),, Derek C. Richardson (1), Alex J. Meyer (3), Daniel J. Scheeres (3), Matija, \'Cuk (4), Seth A. Jacobson (5), Patrick Michel (6), \"Ozg\"ur Karatekin (7),, Andrew F. Cheng (8), Masatoshi Hirabayashi (9)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the post-impact spin state of Dimorphos after the DART mission, revealing potential for chaotic tumbling and unstable rotation due to resonances, with implications for planetary defense and asteroid evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analytic model and numerical simulations to analyze the post-impact attitude stability and chaos in Dimorphos's spin state.
Findings
Dimorphos may enter a chaotic tumbling state post-impact.
Resonance locations can induce attitude instability.
Chaotic rotation about the long axis is likely near resonances.
Abstract
The NASA Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission is a planetary defense-driven test of a kinetic impactor on Dimorphos, the satellite of the binary asteroid 65803 Didymos. DART will intercept Dimorphos at a relative speed of , perturbing Dimorphos's orbital velocity and changing the binary orbital period. We present three independent methods (one analytic and two numerical) to investigate the post-impact attitude stability of Dimorphos as a function of its axial ratios, and (), and the momentum transfer efficiency . The first method uses a novel analytic approach in which we assume a circular orbit and a point-mass primary that identifies four fundamental frequencies of motion corresponding to the secondary's mean motion, libration, precession, and nutation frequencies. At resonance locations among these four…
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