NASA's Surprise Find: This Asteroid's 'Dinky Sidekick'

Lucy spacecraft discovers 'mini moon' during flyby of Dinkinesh space hunk
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Nov 3, 2023 1:10 PM CDT
Check Out This Asteroid's 'Mini Moon'
This photo shows a photo taken by the Lucy spacecraft during a Wednesday flyby of asteroid Dinkinesh, 300 million miles from Earth.   (NASA via AP)

The little asteroid visited by NASA's Lucy spacecraft this week had a big surprise for scientists. It turns out that the asteroid Dinkinesh has a dinky sidekick—a mini moon. The discovery was made during Wednesday's flyby of Dinkinesh, 300 million miles away in the main asteroid belt beyond Mars. The spacecraft snapped a picture of the pair when it was about 270 miles out, per the AP. In data and images beamed back to Earth, the spacecraft confirmed that Dinkinesh is barely a half-mile across; its closely circling moon is a mere 1/10th of a mile in size. NASA sent Lucy past Dinkinesh as a rehearsal for the bigger, more mysterious asteroids out near Jupiter.

Launched in 2021, the spacecraft will reach the first of these so-called Trojan asteroids in 2027 and explore them for at least six years. The original target list of seven asteroids now stands at 11. Dinkinesh means "you are marvelous" in the Amharic language of Ethiopia. It's also the Amharic name for Lucy, the 3.2 million-year-old remains of a human ancestor found in Ethiopia in the 1970s, for which the spacecraft is named. "Dinkinesh really did live up to its name; this is marvelous," Southwest Research Institute's Hal Levison, the lead scientist, said in a statement.

(More asteroid stories.)

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