ASTEROID 2008 TC3 REVEALED
By Peter Jenniskens, Principal Investigator, SETI Institute
Oct. 8, 2009

The asteroid that crashed in northern Sudan last year was shaped like a loaf of walnut-raisin bread, according to astronomer Peter Scheirich and
colleagues at Ondrejov Observatory and Charles University in the Czech Republic. Scheirich reported his findings
at the Division for Planetary Sciences of the American Astronomical Society meeting in Puerto Rico on October 5,
2009 in a
special session dedicated to this asteroid
one year after the fall. The small asteroid, designated "2008 TC3"[377 kb video],
was the first to have been spotted in space before hitting Earth.
Last December I traveled to Sudan. With the help of Sudan astronomer Muawia Shaddad, and 45 students of the University of Khartoum, we went to the crash site in the Nubian Desert and recovered 300
fragments (called meteorites) by carefully sweeping the gravely desert. We found many different looking meteorites, slightly south of the calculated
impact trajectory.
We now have a gigantic jigsaw puzzle on our hands, from which we try to create a picture of the asteroid and its origins. Now, Scheirich and colleagues
have provided us with a composite sketch of the culprit, cleverly using the eye-witness accounts of astronomers that saw the asteroid sneak up on us.
An irregular shape and rapid tumbling caused asteroid 2008 TC3 to flicker when it reflected sunlight on approach to Earth. Astronomers Marek Kozubal
and Ron Dantowitz of Clay Center Observatory in Brookline, Massachusetts, tracked the asteroid with a telescope and captured the flicker of light [7.36 MB video ]during a two-hour period just before impact. Scheirich combined
these observations with others to work out the shape and orientation of the asteroid.
Other forensic evidence, which was presented during the special session at the AAS/DPS meeting, chaired by Jason S. Herrin of NASA Johnson Space Center
and me, is based on analysis of the recovered meteorites. These are of an unusual "polymict ureilite" type. Herrin confirms that the meteorites still
carry traces of being heated to 1150-1300 ºC, before rapidly cooling down at a rate of tens of °C per hour, during which carbon in the asteroid turned
part of the olivine mineral iron into metallic iron. Hence, asteroid 2008 TC3 is the remains of a minor planet that endured massive collisions billions
of years ago, melting some of the minerals, but not all, before a final collision shattered the planet into asteroids.
Mike Zolensky of NASA's Johnson Space Center first pointed out that, as far as ureilites are concerned, this meteorite is unusually rich in pores, with
pore walls coated by crystals of the mineral olivine. He now reports from X-ray tomography work with Jon Friedrich of Fordham University in New York,
that those pores appear to outline grains that have been incompletely welded together and the pore linings appear to be vapor phase deposits. According
to Zolensky, "2008 TC3 may represent an agglomeration of coarse- to fine-grained incompletely reduced pellets formed during impact, and subsequently
welded together at high temperature."
The carbon in the recovered meteorites is one of the most cooked of all known meteorites. Carbon crystals of graphite and nano-diamonds have been
detected. Still, it turns out that some of the organic matter in the original material survived the heating. Amy Morrow, Hassan Sabbah, and Richard
Zare of Stanford University have found polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in high abundances. Amazingly, Michael Callahan and colleagues of NASA Goddard
Space Flight Center now report that even some amino acids have survived.
To find more puzzle pieces, Muawia Shaddad and I plan to re-visit the scene of the crash in the Nubian Desert on the one-year anniversary of the find
this December 6-7, after sharing notes during a 2008 TC3 Workshop at the University of Khartoum.
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