by RJN » Fri Nov 18, 2005 3:20 pm
I would be curious if anyone noticed that the bottom of Itokawa as captured by the image displayed on the Nov. 16 APOD is roughly circular. Yes, that is surely a chance projection, but it seems to me unlikely that any projection of a low mass body would appear circular. I wonder if the near circularity is an artifact of the field of view of the camera, a statistical fluke, or perhaps something giving a clue to the past of the asteroid. The possibility that the circularity is a relic of some gravitational perturbation from Earth (given that Itokawa is a loose rubble pie), or the relic of its creation impact (given that Itokawa is solid) come to mind. Any thoughts?
- RJN
I would be curious if anyone noticed that the bottom of Itokawa as captured by the image displayed on the Nov. 16 APOD is roughly circular. Yes, that is surely a chance projection, but it seems to me unlikely that any projection of a low mass body would appear circular. I wonder if the near circularity is an artifact of the field of view of the camera, a statistical fluke, or perhaps something giving a clue to the past of the asteroid. The possibility that the circularity is a relic of some gravitational perturbation from Earth (given that Itokawa is a loose rubble pie), or the relic of its creation impact (given that Itokawa is solid) come to mind. Any thoughts?
- RJN