After one fracture, the smaller, leftover pieces will turn even more easily, breaking again and again, faster and faster. In systems like ours, the final relics of many asteroids will be their constituent boulders and pebbles, and the devastation will reach past Pluto’s orbit. “[The asteroid] belt will likely experience ubiquitous YORP-induced destruction,” Veras says.
In previous work in 2014 Veras sketched out the basics of the phenomenon, but the recent research covers a variety of asteroid compositions. The space rocks range in consistency from loose piles of rubble, to firmly attached boulders, to solid chunks of iron, and only the most strongly stuck together appear to survive the end of the solar system. “What’s shown in this work,” Hollands says, is that “during the [red] giant phase, [an asteroid] doesn’t really have much say in what happens.”
The new research also notes that the YORPocalypse will produce many asteroid pairs, where one smaller fragment orbits a larger chunk—something of an orbital novelty. These twins won’t last long though, because further spinning will continue to break them down.
In addition to providing a glimpse into a violent episode of our solar system’s future, the work bolsters researchers’ ability to read the histories of distant white dwarf systems by looking at their atmospheres. As astronomers continue to watch these stars shred any asteroid that gets too close, a better appreciation of the YORP-era conditions the rocks either survived or succumbed to will allow researchers to understand their whole lifecycle, Veras says, birth to death.