Can Hayabusa2 touch down? Study reveals space mission's target asteroid is tinier and faster than thought

Sadie Harley
scientific editor

Robert Egan
associate editor

Astronomers have used observatories around the world, including the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope (ESO's VLT), to study the asteroid 1998 KY26, revealing it to be almost three times smaller and spinning much faster than previously thought.
The asteroid is the 2031 target for Japan's Hayabusa2 extended mission. The new observations offer key information for the mission's operations at the asteroid, just six years out from the spacecraft's encounter with 1998 KY26.
"We found that the reality of the object is completely different from what it was previously described as," says astronomer Toni Santana-Ros, a researcher from the University of Alicante, Spain, who led a study on 1998 KY26.
The paper, "Hayabusa2 mission target 1998 KY26 preview: decametre size, high albedo and rotating twice as fast," was published in .
The new observations, combined with previous , have revealed that the asteroid is just 11 meters wide, meaning it could easily fit .
It is also spinning about twice as fast as previously thought. "One day on this asteroid lasts only five minutes!" he says. Previous data indicated that the asteroid was around 30 meters in diameter and completed a rotation in 10 minutes or so.
"The smaller size and faster rotation now measured will make Hayabusa2's visit even more interesting, but also even more challenging," says co-author Olivier Hainaut, an astronomer at ESO in Germany. This is because a touchdown maneuver, , will be more difficult to perform than anticipated.
1998 KY26 is set to be the final target asteroid for the Japanese Aerospace eXploration Agency (JAXA)'s Hayabusa2 spacecraft. In its original mission, Hayabusa2 explored the 900-meter-diameter asteroid 162173 Ryugu in 2018, returning asteroid samples to Earth in 2020.
With fuel remaining, the spacecraft was sent on an extended mission until 2031, when it's set to encounter 1998 KY26, aiming to learn more about the smallest asteroids. This will be the first time a space mission encounters a tiny asteroid—all previous missions visited asteroids with diameters in the hundreds or even thousands of meters.
Santana-Ros and his team observed 1998 KY26 from the ground to support the preparation of the mission. Because the asteroid is very small and, hence, very faint, studying it required waiting for a close encounter with Earth and using large telescopes, like ESO's in Chile's Atacama Desert.
The observations revealed that the asteroid has a bright surface and likely consists of a solid chunk of rock, which may have originated from a piece of a planet or another asteroid. However, the team could not completely rule out the possibility that the asteroid is made up of rubble piles loosely sticking together.
"We have never seen a 10-meter-size asteroid in situ, so we don't really know what to expect and how it will look," says Santana-Ros, who is also affiliated with the University of Barcelona.
"The amazing story here is that we found that the size of the asteroid is comparable to the size of the spacecraft that is going to visit it! And we were able to characterize such a small object using our telescopes, which means that we can do it for other objects in the future," says Santana-Ros.
"Our methods could have an impact on the plans for future near-Earth asteroid exploration or even asteroid mining."
"Moreover, we now know we can characterize even the smallest hazardous asteroids that could impact Earth, such as the one that hit near Chelyabinsk, in Russia in 2013, which was barely larger than KY26," concludes Hainaut.
More information: Hayabusa2 mission target 1998 KY26 preview: decametre size, high albedo and rotating twice as fast. Nature Communications (2025).
Journal information: Nature Communications
Provided by ESO