The young Hobson family: Possible binary parent body and low-velocity dispersal
David Vokrouhlick\'y, Miroslav Bro\v{z}, Bojan Novakovi\'c, David, Nesvorn\'y

TL;DR
This study investigates the very young Hobson asteroid family, revealing its unusual size distribution and suggesting it may originate from a binary parent body, with implications for understanding asteroid disruption processes.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the size distribution and formation scenarios of the Hobson family, including the possibility of a binary parent object, and sets limits on dispersal velocities.
Findings
Hobson family has an unusual size distribution with two large bodies and smaller asteroids.
The estimated dispersal velocity limit is approximately 10-20 m/s.
Data supports a binary parent body scenario over a canonical impact model.
Abstract
Asteroid families with ages younger than Myr offer an interesting possibility of studying the outcomes of asteroid disruptions that are little modified by subsequent evolutionary processes. We analyze a very young asteroid family associated with (18777) Hobson in the central part of the main belt. We aim at (i) understanding its peculiar size distribution, and (ii) setting an upper limit on the characteristic dispersal velocity at subkilometer sizes corresponding to the smallest visible Hobson members. We identified the Hobson family using an up-to-date asteroid catalog. A significant increase in the number of its known members allowed us to study their size distribution and compare it with computer simulations of catastrophic disruptions. Backward orbital integrations of the heliocentric orbits allowed us to confirm the previously suggested age of Hobson and helped to estimate…
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