Abstract

Abstract Near-Earth asteroid (3200) Phaethon is notable for its association with a strong annual meteor shower, the Geminids, indicative of one or more episodes of mass ejection in the past. The mechanism of Phaethon’s past activity is not yet understood. Here, we present a Hubble Space Telescope (HST) search of meter-sized fragments in the vicinity of Phaethon, carried out during Phaethon’s historic approach to Earth in mid-December of 2017. Numerical simulations conducted to guide HST’s pointing also show that the dynamical evolution of Phaethon-originated particles is quick, as ejected materials take no longer than ∼250 years to spread to the entire orbit of Phaethon. Our search was completed down to a 4 m class limit (assuming Phaethon-like albedo) and was expected to detect 0.035% of particles ejected by Phaethon in the past several decades. The negative result of our search capped the total mass loss of Phaethon over the past few dozen orbits to be 1012 kg at the 3σ level, taking the best estimates of size power-law from meteor observations and spacecraft data. Our result also implies a millimeter-sized dust flux of within 0.1 au of Phaethon, suggesting that any Phaethon-bound mission is unlikely to encounter dense dust clouds.

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