The Hilda family (
001) is an ancient collisional
asteroid family of at least 409 known asteroids,
named for its largest member, the -across asteroid
153 Hilda. It lies within the larger dynamical group of
Hilda asteroids, a group of asteroids in the 3:2
orbital resonance with
Jupiter
Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and the List of Solar System objects by size, largest in the Solar System. It is a gas giant with a Jupiter mass, mass more than 2.5 times that of all the other planets in the Solar System combined a ...
. All members of the family are dark
P-type asteroids with
albedo
Albedo ( ; ) is the fraction of sunlight that is Diffuse reflection, diffusely reflected by a body. It is measured on a scale from 0 (corresponding to a black body that absorbs all incident radiation) to 1 (corresponding to a body that reflects ...
s of around 0.06. Another asteroid family in the Hilda dynamical group is the
Schubart family, named for its largest member,
1911 Schubart.
An asteroid family is a group of physically-related asteroids usually created by a collision with an original larger asteroid, with the fragments continuing on similar orbits to the original. This is distinct from a
dynamical group in that the members of a dynamical group only share similar orbits because of gravitational interactions with planets, which concentrate asteroids in a particular orbital range. Members of the Hilda family are both part of the wider
Hilda dynamical group, and fragments of 153 Hilda. The family is considered a non-catastrophic asteroid family because 153 Hilda, its largest member, makes up nearly 3/4 of the family's total mass, rather than simply being the largest of a number of fragments each making up a small fraction of the original destroyed asteroid.
The family is believed to be one of the oldest collisional families ever discovered, with an estimated age of likely 4 billion years.
Models based on the modern Solar System indicate it being very unlikely for an asteroid as large as 153 Hilda to suffer a collision large enough to create its family, even over the course of billions of years of encounters with other asteroids, leading to a 2011 study to propose that the family-creating impact event happened during the
Late Heavy Bombardment, when impact rates in the Solar System were briefly much higher.
Large members
References
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Asteroid groups and families
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