Space Travel News
IRON AND ICE
DART images show slow motion rock exchange between binary asteroids
illustration only

DART images show slow motion rock exchange between binary asteroids

by Clarence Oxford
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Mar 11, 2026
About 15 percent of asteroids near Earth have small moons orbiting them, making binary asteroid systems common close to our planet. A new analysis of images from NASA's Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft now shows that these systems can exchange material in slow motion collisions over millions of years, reshaping their surfaces and influencing how they evolve.

A team led by the University of Maryland examined high resolution images that DART captured just before it deliberately impacted the small asteroid moon Dimorphos in 2022. In those final frames, after careful processing, they identified bright fan shaped streaks across the surface of Dimorphos that mark where low velocity projectiles struck the moon after traveling from its larger companion asteroid, Didymos. The researchers report that these patterns provide the first direct visual evidence that rocks and dust naturally move between the two bodies in the binary system.

The findings, published March 6, 2026, in The Planetary Science Journal under the title "Evidence of Recent Material Transport within a Binary Asteroid System," indicate that the Didymos Dimorphos pair is more active than previously appreciated. Lead author Jessica Sunshine, a professor with joint appointments in the University of Maryland's Department of Astronomy and Department of Geological, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences, said the team initially suspected an instrumental or processing problem when they first saw the unusual patterns. After they refined their techniques and removed lighting artifacts, they concluded that the streaks are consistent with low velocity impacts from what they describe as "cosmic snowballs" of material shed from Didymos.

The work also provides the first visual confirmation of the Yarkovsky O'Keefe Radzievskii Paddak (YORP) effect in action on a small asteroid. In the YORP effect, uneven heating from sunlight causes small asteroids to spin faster over time until loose material flies off their surfaces and can accumulate to form moons. Sunshine and her colleagues argue that this process likely produced the Didymos Dimorphos system and that the fan like markings on Dimorphos record where shed material from Didymos landed on the smaller body.

Revealing those markings required months of detailed image processing. DART's approach trajectory created an unusual challenge for interpretation because the spacecraft flew almost straight toward Dimorphos with little change in viewing geometry or illumination. To separate real surface features from lighting effects, UMD astronomy research scientist Tony Farnham and former postdoctoral researcher Juan Rizos developed methods to subtract shadows cast by boulders and to correct for subtle brightness variations across the surface. When those corrections were applied, a network of rays wrapping around Dimorphos emerged from the data.

The team then tested whether these rays could simply be due to the position of the Sun relative to the spacecraft. By mapping each streak back to its apparent source region, they found that the features all originated in a specific area near the edge of Dimorphos that is offset from the sub solar point where the Sun was overhead. As they refined a three dimensional model of Dimorphos, the fan shaped streaks became clearer rather than fading, which strengthened the case that they represent actual deposits of material delivered from Didymos rather than artifacts of illumination.

Further dynamical calculations, led by University of Maryland alum Harrison Agrusa, showed that the material left Didymos at about 30.7 centimeters per second, which is slower than the average human walking speed. At these speeds, incoming clumps of dust and rock tend not to excavate classic craters. Instead, Sunshine explained, their gentle impacts create asymmetric deposits that spread out in fans, consistent with the observed ray patterns concentrated near the equator of Dimorphos where models predict spun off material from Didymos should land.

To validate this interpretation, the researchers carried out impact experiments at the University of Maryland's Institute for Physical Science and Technology. In the laboratory, former postdoctoral associate Esteban Wright and collaborators dropped marbles into sand mixed with painted gravel intended to mimic boulders on Dimorphos. High speed cameras recorded how the impacts sent material streaming between and around the gravel pieces. The presence of boulders blocked some ejecta while channeling other particles into rays, producing fan like patterns that closely resembled the streaks seen on Dimorphos in the DART images.

Complementary computer simulations at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory explored impacts by both compact rocks and looser clumps of dust, similar to the hypothesized "cosmic snowballs" moving between Didymos and Dimorphos. Those simulations showed that boulder covered surfaces naturally sculpt incoming material into narrow rays regardless of whether the impactor is a solid object or an aggregate of grains. The combination of numerical models, laboratory experiments, and spacecraft imagery supports the conclusion that Dimorphos' surface records ongoing exchanges of material within the binary asteroid system at very low speeds.

Because the DART spacecraft captured its images just before it crashed into Dimorphos, the new results show that material exchange between Didymos and its moon was already underway before the impact. Sunshine noted that the fan like deposits should extend onto the hemisphere that DART did not strike and that some of these features may have survived the collision. The upcoming European Space Agency Hera mission, scheduled to arrive at Didymos in December 2026, will be able to search for remnants of the pre impact rays and for any new patterns created by boulders that DART dislodged.

Hera's close up survey of the system could reveal how much the DART impact altered Dimorphos' surface and whether the ongoing "cosmic snowball" traffic continues to shape the moon after such a major event. By comparing Hera's observations with the pre impact DART data and the team's models, scientists hope to refine their understanding of how binary asteroids respond to both natural processes and deliberate deflection attempts. Those insights are directly relevant to planetary defense strategies that aim to gently nudge potentially hazardous asteroids off Earth crossing trajectories.

Research Report:Evidence of Recent Material Transport within a Binary Asteroid System

Related Links
University of Maryland
Asteroid and Comet Mission News, Science and Technology

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
IRON AND ICE
Ryugu samples record early solar system magnetic fields
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Mar 11, 2026
To reconstruct the early history of our solar system, scientists need to track how primitive dust and rock interacted with the weak but pervasive magnetic field of the ancient solar nebula. These materials could acquire natural remanent magnetization, or NRM, during formation and alteration, locking in a magnetic record that persists for billions of years. By reading these records, researchers can constrain how mass was distributed in the protoplanetary disk and how material moved and aggregated to form ... read more

IRON AND ICE
IRON AND ICE
Curiosity Blog, Sols 4798-4803: Back for More Science

Mars relay orbiter seen as backbone for future exploration

UAE extends Mars probe mission until 2028

Mars' 'Young' Volcanoes Were More Complex Than Scientists Once Thought

IRON AND ICE
NASA announces overhaul of Artemis lunar program amid technical delays

Chang'e-6 farside samples reshape lunar impact history

The Race Is On: Artemis, China and Musk Turn the Moon Into the Next Strategic High Ground

First Crewed Moon Flyby In 54 Years: Artemis II

IRON AND ICE
Jupiter size refined by new radio mapping

Polar weather on Jupiter and Saturn hints at the planets' interior details

Europa ice delamination may deliver nutrients to hidden ocean

Birth conditions fixed water contrast on Jupiters moons

IRON AND ICE
Tough microbe study backs idea of life moving between planets

Stellar space weather may blur alien radio beacons

Study questions assumptions about hidden alien technosignals

Study revisits chances of detecting alien technosignatures

IRON AND ICE
GMV to deliver new UK launch monitoring algorithms for NSpOC

PLD Space lands 180m euro boost to advance global launch services

Japan startup's space rocket fails for third time

New Wenchang lunar pad completes first Long March 10 test

IRON AND ICE
Dragon spacecraft gears up for crew 12 arrival and station science work

China prepares offshore test base for reusable liquid rocket launches

Retired EVA workhorse to guide China's next-gen spacesuit and lunar gear

Tiangong science program delivers data surge

IRON AND ICE
DART images show slow motion rock exchange between binary asteroids

Ryugu samples record early solar system magnetic fields

NASA defense test kicked asteroid off course -- and changed its orbit around the sun

Amino acids in Bennu asteroid hint at icy radioactive origin

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2026 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.