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- Newsgroups: sci.astro
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!ncar!noao!stsci!scivax!zellner
- From: zellner@stsci.edu
- Subject: Re: Asteroidal Satellites
- Message-ID: <1993Jan22.131723.1@stsci.edu>
- Lines: 18
- Sender: news@stsci.edu
- Organization: Space Telescope Science Institute
- References: <20JAN199301453454@kelvin.jpl.nasa.gov> <3191@tymix.Tymnet.COM> <C18v5H.6oA@well.sf.ca.us> <1993Jan22.112809.1@fnalf.fnal.gov>
- Distribution: na
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 18:17:23 GMT
-
-
- > In article <C18v5H.6oA@well.sf.ca.us>, metares@well.sf.ca.us (Tom Van
- Flandern) writes:
-
- >> And the only way that asteroids can get lots of satellites orbiting
- >> them with anything like the observed abundance is in the explosive breakup
- >> of a much larger parent body. The prediction that asteroid satellites are
- >> numerous and commonplace originates from the exploded planet hypothesis.
- >
-
- Toutatis was indeed a surprise. But the "observed abundance" is still very
- small. Extensive groundbased surveys looking for satellite objects separated
- by an arcsecond or more have been uniformly negative. We have an approved
- Space Telescope program to look down to the HST resolution for a dozen or
- more candidate objects. A year from now, I'll let you know what we saw.
-
- Ben
-
-