Study of the asteroid Bennu using geodesyANNs and Osiris-Rex data

Abstract

Asteroids and other small bodies in the solar system tend to have irregular shapes, owing to their low gravity. This irregularity does not only apply to the topology, but also to the underlying geology, potentially containing regions of different densities and materials. The topology can be derived from optical observations, while the mass density distribution of an object is only observable, to some extent, in its gravitational field. In a companion paper, we presented geodesyNets, a neural network approach to infer the mass density distribution of an object from measurements of its gravitational field. In the present work, we apply this approach to the asteroid Bennu using real data from the Osiris Rex mission. The mission measured the trajectories of not only the Osiris Rex spacecraft itself, but also of numerous pebble-sized rock particles which temporarily orbited Bennu. From these trajectory data, we obtain a representation of Bennu's mass density and validate it by propagating, in the resulting gravity field, multiple pebbles not used in the training process. The performance is comparable to that of a polyhedral gravity model of uniform density, but does not require a shape model. As little additional information is needed, we see this as a step towards autonomous on-board inversion of gravitational fields.

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