A newly discovered “asteroid” has stunned astronomers by spinning faster than any space rock of its size ever observed. Detected in the very first images from the “Vera C. Rubin Observatory”, this cosmic object is rewriting what scientists thought they knew about asteroid structure and strength.
The asteroid, named “2025 MN45”, completes one full rotation in just “112 seconds” — roughly the speed of a carnival Ferris wheel. For an object wider than 500 meters, this rate of spin was previously thought to be impossible.
Why This Asteroid Breaks Every Known Rule
Most asteroids of this size are what scientists call “rubble piles” — loose collections of rock and debris barely held together by gravity. If they spin too fast, centrifugal forces tear them apart.
That’s why astronomers believed large asteroids couldn’t rotate faster than once every “2.2 hours”.
2025 MN45 shatters that limit.
Its extreme speed suggests something extraordinary: 👉 “It must be made of solid rock”, not loosely bound debris.
“This is unlike anything we’ve reliably observed before,” said astronomer Sarah Greenstreet during a January 7 presentation at a meeting of the “American Astronomical Society”.
Discovered by a Telescope Built to Change Astronomy
It was identified using early survey data from the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile — one of the most powerful sky-mapping facilities ever built.
Rubin’s mission is ambitious:
> Scan the “entire southern sky every few nights.”
> Continue observations for “10 years.”
> Track objects that move, flash, or change — including asteroids
During its initial “first look” campaign, Rubin captured:
> “~2,100 solar system objects.”
> “90% previously unknown.”
> Rotation periods measured for “76 asteroids.”
Among them, “2025 MN45 stood alone”.
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A New Class Emerges
Researchers found that:
> “16 asteroids” spun faster than the theoretical breakup limit
> “3 rotated faster than once every five minutes.”
> “2025 MN45” was the fastest of all
According to scientists at the “University of Washington”, all of these ultra-fast rotators are likely “solid monolithic bodies”, possibly fragments from the dense cores of larger asteroids shattered by ancient collisions.
This means the asteroid belt may contain “far more solid objects” than previously believed.
Why Asteroid Spin Rates Matter
Rotation speed is one of the few tools astronomers have to study an asteroid’s hidden interior.
By analyzing spin, scientists can infer:
> Internal strength
> Composition (solid vs rubble pile)
> Collision history
> Structural evolution over billions of years
Fast-spinning asteroids like 2025 MN45 provide a “rare window into the violent past of our solar system”.
Clues from the Asteroid Belt
Astronomers believe 2025 MN45 likely originated in the “main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter”, where massive collisions were once common.
A powerful impact may have:
> Cracked open a large asteroid
> Ejected its dense core
> Sent this solid fragment spinning into space
If true, many more extreme rotators may be waiting to be discovered.
A New Era of Space Science
The discovery of the fastest-spinning asteroid ever recorded is just the beginning.
As the Vera C. Rubin Observatory continues its decade-long sky survey, scientists expect:
> Thousands of new discoveries
> Entirely new asteroid categories
> Deeper insight into how planets — including Earth — were formed
One thing is already clear: “The population is far more diverse, dynamic, and surprising than we imagined.”
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