An asteroid family is a population of that share similar proper orbital elements, such as semimajor axis, eccentricity, and orbital inclination. The members of the families are thought to be fragments of past asteroid collisions. An asteroid family is a more specific term than asteroid group whose members, while sharing some broad orbital characteristics, may be otherwise unrelated to each other.
There are about 20 to 30 reliably recognized families, with several tens of less certain groupings. Most asteroid families are found in the main belt, although several family-like groups such as the Pallas family, Hungaria family, and the Phocaea family lie at smaller semi-major axis or larger inclination than the main belt.
Haumea family has been identified associated with the dwarf planet .Michael E. Brown, Kristina M. Barkume, Darin Ragozzine & Emily L. Schaller, A collisional family of icy objects in the Kuiper belt, Nature, 446, (March 2007), pp 294-296. Some studies have tried to find evidence of collisional families among the , but at present the evidence is inconclusive.
Due to the method of origin, all the members have closely matching compositions for most families. Notable exceptions are those families (such as the Vesta family) which formed from a large differentiated parent body.
Asteroid families are thought to have lifetimes of the order of a billion years, depending on various factors (e.g. smaller asteroids are lost faster). This is significantly shorter than the Solar System's age, so few if any are relics of the early Solar System. Decay of families occurs both because of slow dissipation of the orbits due to perturbations from Jupiter or other large bodies, and because of collisions between asteroids which grind them down to small bodies. Such small asteroids then become subject to perturbations such as the Yarkovsky effect that can push them towards orbital resonances with Jupiter over time. Once there, they are relatively rapidly ejected from the asteroid belt. Tentative age estimates have been obtained for some families, ranging from hundreds of millions of years to less than several million years as for the compact Karin family. Old families are thought to contain few small members, and this is the basis of the age determinations.
It is supposed that many very old families have lost all the smaller and medium-sized members, leaving only a few of the largest intact. A suggested example of such old family remains are the 9 Metis and 113 Amalthea asteroid pair. Further evidence for a large number of past families (now dispersed) comes from analysis of chemical ratios in . These show that there must have once been at least 50 to 100 parent bodies large enough to be differentiated, that have since been shattered to expose their cores and produce the actual meteorites (Kelley & Gaffey 2000).
The astronomer Kiyotsugu Hirayama (1874–1943) pioneered the estimation of proper elements for asteroids, and first identified several of the most prominent families in 1918. In his honor, asteroid families are sometimes called Hirayama families. This particularly applies to the five prominent groupings discovered by him.
The boundaries of the families are somewhat vague because at the edges they blend into the background density of asteroids in the main belt. For this reason the number of members even among discovered asteroids is usually only known approximately, and membership is uncertain for asteroids near the edges.
Additionally, some interlopers from the heterogeneous background asteroid population are expected even in the central regions of a family. Since the true family members caused by the collision are expected to have similar compositions, most such interlopers can in principle be recognised by spectral properties which do not match those of the bulk of family members. A prominent example is 1 Ceres, the largest asteroid, which is an interloper in the family once named after it (the Ceres family, now the Gefion family).
Spectral characteristics can also be used to determine the membership (or otherwise) of asteroids in the outer regions of a family, as has been used e.g. for the Vesta family, whose members have an unusual composition.
James Bond familyThis is a joke by Nesvorný et al. In their Table 2 the reference is to the 1995 film, GoldenEye. | |
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MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 62 members. | ||||
Alinda group described by projectpluto.com | ||||
Small family of 22 asteroids identified by Zappalà (1995). Most members have been assigned to the encompassing complex of the Flora family by Nesvorný (2014). | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 31 members. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 59 members. | ||||
Large MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 6,169 members. Lowest-numbered members: , , , , and . Not a listed family by Zappalà (1995). Considered a HCM-artifact by Nesvorný (2014) due to a resonant alignment (z1 g + s − g6 − s6 = 0). | ||||
Small family of 23 asteroids identified by Zappalà (1995). Most members have been assigned to the Flora family by Nesvorný (2014). | ||||
Single member. Unsourced. Member of the Vesta family according to AstDyS-2 and Nesvorný (2014). | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 13 members. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 58 members. | ||||
Micro-family with 10 members as per Zappalà (1995). Adj. Bowerian. Alternative name Endymion (Endymionian) family after 342 Endymion. All members: , , , , , , , , and . This family corresponds in large parts with the König family by Nesvorný (2014). | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 19 members. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 17 members. Subset of the large Alauda family as per Nesvorný (2014). All members: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , and . | ||||
Cybele group according to Asteroids, Meteorites, and Comets – by Linda T. Elkins-Tanton and projectpluto.com. Corresponding wiki-category lists a total of 32 members. Not a listed family in HCM by Zappalà (1995), Nesvorný (2014) and AstDyS-2 ( Src), where these bodies are predominantly assigned to the background population. | ||||
Micro-family with 5 members as per Zappalà (1995). All members: , , , and . All belong to the background population according to Nesvorný (2014). | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 19 members. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 133 members. | ||||
Jupiter trojan family according to Roig and Gil-Hutton (2008). Part of the Menelaus clan. | ||||
Jupiter trojan family according to Roig and Gil-Hutton (2008). Part of the Menelaus clan. | ||||
Jupiter trojan family according to Roig and Gil-Hutton (2008). Part of the Menelaus clan. | ||||
C-type asteroid family with 12 identified members as per Zappalà (1995). All members: , , , , , , , , , , and . Predominantly background population with 3 bodies belonging to the stony Maria family per Nesvorný (2014). Not a listed family at AstDyS-2 ( Src) | ||||
Griqua group (not a collisional family) described by projectpluto.com. A marginally unstable group of asteroids observed in the 2 :1 resonance with Jupiter. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 116 members. | ||||
This is a TNO-family. As of 2017, and current categorization, the family consists of 10 members (including parent body). | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 50 members. | ||||
Nesvorný moved family (formerly FIN 503) to candidate status, and to background. Also background according to Milani and Knežević ( AstDyS-2). | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 17 members. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 7 members. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 26 members. Nesvorný moved family to candidate status. | ||||
Jupiter trojan family according to Roig and Gil-Hutton (2008). Part of the Menelaus clan. | ||||
Category with 2 members. 507 Laodica and 635 Vundtia are core members of the Eos family according to AstDyS-2 ( 507; 635) and background asteroid per Nesvorný (; ), respectively. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 1534 members. | ||||
3 listed members. 125 Liberatrix is a background asteroid according to AstDyS-2, and a member of the Nemesis family according to . Background asteroid: 301 Bavaria (both AstDyS-2 and ). 9923 Ronaldthiel is a core member of the Agnia family at AstDyS-2. | ||||
Jupiter trojan family according to Roig and Gil-Hutton (2008). Part of the Menelaus clan. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 16 members. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 481 members. Largest asteroids are members of the Erigone family according to Nesvorný (; ). | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 169 members. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 78 members. | ||||
Jupiter trojan family according to Roig and Gil-Hutton (2008). Part of the Menelaus clan. | ||||
Jupiter trojan family according Milani (1993). Part of the Menelaus clan according to Roig and Gil-Hutton (2008). | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 344 members. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 186 members. | ||||
Previously known as the "1982 QG" family. Second member: ; both are background asteroids according to AstDyS-2 and . | ||||
Jupiter trojan family according to Roig and Gil-Hutton (2008). Part of the Menelaus clan. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 379 members. | ||||
Claimed subgroup of the Flora family. Background asteroid according to both AstDyS-2 and . | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 24 members. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 57 members. Nesvorný moved family to candidate status. | ||||
Jupiter trojan family according to Roig and Gil-Hutton (2008). Part of the Menelaus clan. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 56 members. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 13 members. | ||||
MBA-family (AstDys) according to Milani and Knežević (2014). Total of 23 members. | ||||
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