The Lucy spacecraft, en route to its primary mission targets, zipped past the main-belt asteroid Dinkinesh and revealed its tiny satellite, Selam. New research examines the surfaces and histories of these small rocky worlds.
A Stop Along the Way
In 2021, the Lucy spacecraft embarked on a 12-year mission to study several Jupiter trojan asteroids, which share Jupiter’s orbit. The spacecraft won’t have its first encounter with a Jupiter trojan until 2027, but it hasn’t been idle during its long journey. In November 2023, Lucy performed a dress rehearsal of its trojan-encounter maneuvers during a flyby of a 738-meter-wide main-belt asteroid called (152830) Dinkinesh.

Two images of Dinkinesh from the Lucy mission. The second image features its satellite, Selam. [Bierhaus et al. 2025]
Craters and Boulders
In a recent research article, Edward Bierhaus (Lockheed Martin Space) and collaborators analyzed Lucy flyby images to study the surfaces of Dinkinesh and Selam. The team analyzed global features like troughs and ridges and measured visible craters and boulders.

Locations of craters on Dinkinesh and Selam. The blue lines indicate the most confidently identified craters; orange and green lines mark craters identified less confidently. Click to enlarge. [Bierhaus et al. 2025]
The size–frequency distribution of Dinkinesh’s boulders, on the other hand, is somewhat steeper. This discovery may mean that S-type (stony) asteroids like Dinkinesh have different boulder size distributions than C-type (carbonaceous) asteroids.
Possible Histories
An analysis of the collisional timescales in the main asteroid belt suggests that Dinkinesh is a fragment of a larger asteroid that was split apart at least once, though it’s not yet possible to say which parent body it might have come from. After splitting off from its parent asteroid, Dinkinesh appears to have been subjected to the Yarkovsky–O’Keefe–Radzievskii–Paddack (YORP) effect. This effect arises when sunlight falls on a small asymmetric asteroid, creating a torque that can alter its spin rate. In extreme cases, the YORP effect can crank up an asteroid’s spin rate so much that it sheds some of its surface material or flies apart altogether.

Locations of Sumak Fossa (top) and Fab Dorsum (bottom) indicated with arrows. [Adapted from Bierhaus et al. 2025]
With Lucy en route to its primary objective, there’s still much for us to learn from this mission about the small bodies of our solar system. In the meantime, be sure to check out the full article linked below, as there are far more details about Dinkinesh and Selam than could be included in this short summary!
Citation
“The Geology of a Small Main-Belt S-Class Binary Asteroid System: Dinkinesh and Its Contact Binary Satellite Selam as Observed by the Lucy Mission,” E. B. Bierhaus et al 2025 Planet. Sci. J. 6 299. doi:10.3847/PSJ/ae1968