On The Lunar Origin of Near-Earth Asteroid 2024 PT5
Theodore Kareta, Oscar Fuentes-Mu\~noz, Nicholas Moskovitz, Davide, Farnocchia, Benjamin N.L. Sharkey

TL;DR
This paper presents evidence that the near-Earth asteroid 2024 PT5 is lunar ejecta, making it one of the few known objects originating from the Moon, which has implications for understanding lunar impact processes and asteroid populations.
Contribution
It provides the first spectral and dynamical evidence supporting the lunar origin of NEA 2024 PT5, suggesting a new source population of Moon-derived near-Earth objects.
Findings
Spectral match with lunar samples
Low solar radiation pressure consistent with lunar ejecta
Second NEA with lunar origin evidence
Abstract
The Near-Earth Asteroid (NEA) 2024 PT5 is on an Earth-like orbit which remained in Earth's immediate vicinity for several months at the end of 2024. PT5's orbit is challenging to populate with asteroids originating from the Main Belt and is more commonly associated with rocket bodies mistakenly identified as natural objects or with debris ejected from impacts on the Moon. We obtained visible and near-infrared reflectance spectra of PT5 with the Lowell Discovery Telescope and NASA Infrared Telescope Facility on 2024 August 16. The combined reflectance spectrum matches lunar samples but does not match any known asteroid types -- it is pyroxene-rich while asteroids of comparable spectral redness are olivine-rich. Moreover, the amount of solar radiation pressure observed on the PT5 trajectory is orders of magnitude lower than what would be expected for an artificial object. We therefore…
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