Girish Mahajan (Editor)

V type asteroid

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A V-type asteroid or vestoid is an asteroid whose spectral type is that of 4 Vesta. Approximately 6% of main-belt asteroids are vestoids, with Vesta being by far the largest of them. They are relatively bright, and rather similar to the more common S-type asteroid, which are also made up of stony irons and ordinary chondrites, with V-types containing more pyroxene than S-types.

A large proportion of vestoids have orbital elements similar to those of Vesta, either close enough to be part of the Vesta family, or having similar eccentricities and inclinations but with a semi-major axis lying between about 2.18 AU and the 3:1 Kirkwood gap at 2.50 AU. This suggests that most or all of them originated as fragments of Vesta's crust, possibly blasted out by a single very large impact at some point in its history. The enormous southern-hemisphere crater on Vesta, Rheasilvia, is the prime candidate for the impact site.

The electromagnetic spectrum has a very strong absorption feature longward of 0.75 μm, another feature around 1 μm and is very red shortwards of 0.7 µm. The visible wavelength spectrum of the V-type asteroids (including 4 Vesta itself) is similar to the spectra of basaltic achondrite HED meteorites.

A J-type has been suggested for asteroids having a particularly strong 1 μm absorption band similar to diogenite meteorites, likely being derived from deeper parts of the crust of 4 Vesta.

Distribution

The vast majority of V-type asteroids are members of the Vesta family along with Vesta itself. There are some Mars-crossers such as 9969 Braille, and some Near-Earth objects like 3908 Nyx.

There is also a scattered group of objects in the general vicinity of the Vesta family but not part of it. These include:

  • 809 Lundia — Orbits within the Flora family region
  • 956 Elisa
  • 1459 Magnya — Orbits in the outer asteroid belt, too far from Vesta to be genetically related. May be the remains of a different ancient differentiated body that was shattered long ago.
  • 2113 Ehrdni
  • 2442 Corbett
  • 2566 Kirghizia
  • 2579 Spartacus — Contains a significant portion of olivine, which may indicate origin deeper within Vesta than other V-types.
  • 2640 Hallstrom
  • 2653 Principia
  • 2704 Julian Loewe
  • 2763 Jeans
  • 2795 Lepage
  • 2851 Harbin
  • 2912 Lapalma
  • 3849 Incidentia
  • 3850 Peltier — Orbits within the Flora family region
  • 3869 Norton
  • 4188 Kitezh
  • 4278 Harvey — Member of Baptistina family.
  • 4434 Nikulin
  • 4796 Lewis
  • 4977 Rauthgundis
  • 5379 Abehiroshi
  • References

    V-type asteroid Wikipedia