HomeScienceHayabusa2 faces challenge as asteroid 1998 KY26 spins faster than expected

Hayabusa2 faces challenge as asteroid 1998 KY26 spins faster than expected

Hayabusa2 visited the 900-metre asteroid Ryugu in 2018, returning samples to Earth in 2020. The spacecraft is now on an extended mission until 2031.

September 22, 2025 / 13:29 IST
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An artist’s impression shows Japan’s Hayabusa2 spacecraft landing on asteroid 1998 KY26. (Image: ESO/M. Kornmesser. Asteroid: T. Santana-Ros et al. Hayabusa2 model: SuperTKG/CC-BY-SA).
An artist’s impression shows Japan’s Hayabusa2 spacecraft landing on asteroid 1998 KY26. (Image: ESO/M. Kornmesser. Asteroid: T. Santana-Ros et al. Hayabusa2 model: SuperTKG/CC-BY-SA).

Astronomers have discovered surprising details about asteroid 1998 KY26. Observatories worldwide, including ESO’s Very Large Telescope, studied the asteroid carefully. The findings will help Japan’s Hayabusa2 mission prepare for its 2031 encounter.

How Small and Fast Is 1998 KY26?
New observations reveal the asteroid is only 11 metres wide. That is almost three times smaller than previously estimated. It rotates extremely fast, completing one spin in just five minutes. Earlier measurements suggested a rotation period of roughly ten minutes.

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“This asteroid is very different from previous descriptions of it,” says Toni Santana-Ros, University of Alicante astronomer. He led the study, published in Nature Communications today.

What Challenges Will Hayabusa2 Face?
Hayabusa2 visited the 900-metre asteroid Ryugu in 2018, returning samples to Earth in 2020. The spacecraft is now on an extended mission until 2031. Touching down on 1998 KY26 will be difficult because of its small size and fast rotation.