The main belt contains vast numbers of irregularly shaped asteroids, also known as planetesimals, orbiting the Sun between Mars and Jupiter.
As improved telescope technology finds smaller and more distant asteroids, astronomers at Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) in the US identified clusters of similar- looking bodies clumped in analogous orbits.
These familial objects are likely fragments of catastrophic collisions between larger asteroids eons ago, researchers said.
Finding and studying asteroid families allows scientists to better understand the history of main belt asteroids.
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"We identified all known families and their members and discovered a gigantic void in the main belt, populated by only a handful of asteroids," said Walsh, a coauthor of the research published in the journal Science.
"These relics must be part of the original asteroid belt. That is the real prize, to know what the main belt looked like just after it formed," he said.
As asteroids rotate in orbit around the Sun, their surfaces heat up during the day and cool down at night. This creates radiation that can act as a sort of mini-thruster, causing asteroids to drift widely over time.
After billions of years, family members would be almost impossible to identify, until now.
The team used a novel technique, searching asteroid data from the inner region of the belt for old, dispersed families. They looked for the "edges" of families, those fragments that have drifted the furthest.
"If you look for correlations of size and distance, you can see the shapes of old families," said Delbo.
"The family we identified has no name, because it is not clear which asteroid is the parent," Walsh said.
"This family is so old that it appears to have formed over 4 billion years ago, before the gas giants in the outer solar system moved into their current orbits," he said.
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