Smooth Sections of Asteroid Itokawa
			
		
		
		
			Why are parts of this asteroid's surface so smooth?  
No one is yet sure, but it may have to do with the dynamics of an 
asteroid that is a loose 
pile of rubble rather than a solid rock.  
The unusual asteroid 
has been visited recently by the 
Japanese spacecraft 
Hayabusa 
that has been documenting its unusual structure and mysterious 
lack of craters.  
Recent analyses of the border regions 
between smooth and rugged sections of Itokawa indicate that jostling of the asteroid might be creating segregation between large and small rocks near the surface, like the 
Brazil nut effect.
In late 2005, Hayabusa actually touched down on one of the smooth patches, dubbed the MUSES Sea, and 
collected soil samples that are to be returned to Earth for analysis.
Hayabusa will start its three-year long 
return trip 
to Earth this month.
Computer simulations show that 500-meter asteroid Itokawa 
may impact the Earth within the next few million years.