Physical Properties of the Young Asteroid Pair 2010 UM26 and 2010 RN221
David Jewitt, Yonyoung Kim, Jing Li, Max Mutchler

TL;DR
This study characterizes the physical properties of the young asteroid pair 2010 UM26 and 2010 RN221, revealing details about their sizes, rotation, and breakup process, with no remaining debris detected nearby.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution imaging and photometric data that support a rotational breakup origin for the asteroid pair, highlighting differences from other known breakup events.
Findings
Primary asteroid diameter ~760 m
Secondary asteroid diameter ~350 m
No residual material detected near the pair
Abstract
The main belt asteroids 458271 (2010 UM26) and 2010 RN221 share almost identical orbital elements and currently appear as comoving objects 30 arcsec apart in the plane of the sky. They are products of the breakup of a parent object, or the splitting of a binary, with a separation age measured in decades rather than thousands or millions of years as for most other asteroid pairs (Vokrouhlicky et al.~2022). The nature of the precursor body and the details of the breakup and separation of the components are unknown. We obtained deep, high resolution imaging using the Hubble Space Telescope to characterize the pair and to search for material in addition to the main components that might have been released upon breakup. The primary and secondary have absolute magnitudes = 17.98 and 19.69, respectively, and effective diameters 760 m and 350 m (assuming geometric albedo 0.20). The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Isotope Analysis in Ecology · Geological and Geochemical Analysis
