Asteroid Vesta May Be a Fragment of a Lost Planet, Say Scientists

New study suggests Vesta isn’t a protoplanet but a chunk of an ancient, lost world.

Advertisement
Written by Gadgets 360 Staff | Updated: 9 May 2025 22:00 IST
Highlights
  • Vesta lacks a dense core, contradicting earlier planetary classification
  • New gravity data suggests Vesta formed from a giant planetary collision
  • Researchers propose that Vesta is a planetary fragment, not a protoplanet

Asteroid Vesta may be debris from a larger planet shattered billions of years ago

Photo Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCAL/MPS/DLR/IDA

Asteroid Vesta, long considered a stalled protoplanet, may actually be a massive fragment of a larger world that once existed in our solar system. New findings based on gravity-field mapping and spin-rate data suggest Vesta lacks the dense core typically found in differentiated planetary bodies. The discovery challenges previous assumptions, drawn from NASA's Dawn mission in 2012, that classified Vesta as an embryonic planet. Now, scientists report that Vesta might have been ejected from a differentiated world in a massive collision 4.5 billion years ago, upending ideas about the development of planets and asteroids.

New Gravity Data Suggests Vesta Is Debris from a Destroyed Planet, Not a Protoplanet

As per a new study published in Nature Astronomy on April 23, 2025, Vesta does not quite match the former model. Refined calibration methods polished the radio Doppler signals, confirming the absence of a metal-rich core, which was inconsistent with earlier work. Seth Jacobson of Michigan State University, who led the research, stated the new interpretation marks a major shift in planetary science. While Vesta's basaltic, volcanic surface still indicates geological activity, its internal uniformity contradicts the expectations of a body that once underwent full differentiation.

Advertisement

This paradox has caused scientists to reconsider the asteroid's heritage. One scenario is that Vesta started to differentiate but never got very far. But data from meteorites called howardite-eucrite-diogenites (HEDs), thought to have come from Vesta, show no signs of such incomplete differentiation. Jacobson and his team instead favour the explanation that Vesta was formed from material blasted off a fully developed planet during an ancient planetary collision, which could also illustrate its volcanic surface without requiring it to have a dense core.

The results not only question Vesta's identity but also suggest a possibility of a more general theory: that other asteroids could also be pieces of shattered planets. NASA's Psyche and ESA's Hera missions, planned for the next decades, intend to do such gravity investigations, which could ultimately confirm this new view. Jacobson noted that Vesta's composition could even hint at a shared origin with Earth or other early planets, a hypothesis that may reshape asteroid science entirely.

Advertisement

 

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Xiaomi Civi 6 and Civi 6 Pro Specifications Tipped in New Leak
  2. These OnePlus and Nothing Phones Could Get Expensive in India Soon
  3. Realme 16T Geekbench Appearance Hints at Chipset
  1. Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Successor Might Skip the 3x Telephoto Rear Camera, Early Leak Suggests
  2. Drift Exploit Claims Its First Victim as DeFi Protocol Carrot Shuts Down
  3. Realme 16T Geekbench Listing Suggests Possible Performance Downgrade Over Realme 15T
  4. Microsoft Rolls Out Xbox Mode on Windows 11 PCs in Select Markets
  5. OnePlus, Nothing and More Smartphone Makers Reportedly Raise Prices of Their Mid-Range, Flagship Handsets as RAM Shortage Rages On
  6. Xiaomi Civi 6, Civi 6 Pro Leak Hints at Dimensity Chips and 50-Megapixel Periscope Camera
  7. Bitcoin Climbs Near $77,000 as Liquidity Trends and Stable Momentum Support Market
  8. Google’s Gemini AI App Could Soon Start Showing Ads, Company Executive Reportedly Hints During Earnings Call
  9. YouTube Expands Picture-in-Picture Feature Globally for All Users
  10. Star Wars: Galactic Racer Launches October 6, Pre-Orders Now Live
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.