305 research outputs found
Physical and dynamical characterisation of low Delta-V NEA (190491) 2000 FJ10
We investigated the physical properties and dynamical evolution of Near Earth
Asteroid (NEA) (190491) 2000 FJ10 in order to assess the suitability of this
accessible NEA as a space mission target. Photometry and colour determination
were carried out with the 1.54 m Kuiper Telescope and the 10 m Southern African
Large Telescope during the object's recent favourable apparition in 2011-12.
During the earlier 2008 apparition, a spectrum of the object in the 6000-9000
Angstrom region was obtained with the 4.2 m William Herschel Telescope.
Interpretation of the observational results was aided by numerical simulations
of 1000 dynamical clones of 2000 FJ10 up to 10^6 yr in the past and in the
future. The asteroid's spectrum and colours determined by our observations
suggest a taxonomic classification within the S-complex although other
classifications (V, D, E, M, P) cannot be ruled out. On this evidence, it is
unlikely to be a primitive, relatively unaltered remnant from the early history
of the solar system and thus a low priority target for robotic sample return.
Our photometry placed a lower bound of 2 hrs to the asteroid's rotation period.
Its absolute magnitude was estimated to be 21.54+-0.1 which, for a typical
S-complex albedo, translates into a diameter of 130+-20 m. Our dynamical
simulations show that it has likely been an Amor for the past 10^5 yr. Although
currently not Earth-crossing, it will likely become so during the period 50 -
100 kyr in the future. It may have arrived from the inner or central Main Belt
> 1 Myr ago as a former member of a low-inclination S-class asteroid family.
Its relatively slow rotation and large size make it a suitable destination for
a human mission. We show that ballistic Earth-190491-Earth transfer
trajectories with Delta-V < 2 km s^-1 at the asteroid exist between 2052 and
2061.Comment: 2 Tables, 11 Figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Spectral and Spin Measurement of Two Small and Fast-Rotating Near-Earth Asteroids
In May 2012 two asteroids made near-miss "grazing" passes at distances of a
few Earth-radii: 2012 KP24 passed at nine Earth-radii and 2012 KT42 at only
three Earth-radii. The latter passed inside the orbital distance of
geosynchronous satellites. From spectral and imaging measurements using NASA's
3-m Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF), we deduce taxonomic, rotational, and
physical properties. Their spectral characteristics are somewhat atypical among
near-Earth asteroids: C-complex for 2012 KP24 and B-type for 2012 KT42, from
which we interpret the albedos of both asteroids to be between 0.10 and 0.15
and effective diameters of 20+-2 and 6+-1 meters, respectively. Among B-type
asteroids, the spectrum of 2012 KT42 is most similar to 3200 Phaethon and 4015
Wilson-Harrington. Not only are these among the smallest asteroids spectrally
measured, we also find they are among the fastest-spinning: 2012 KP24 completes
a rotation in 2.5008+-0.0006 minutes and 2012 KT42 rotates in 3.634+-0.001
minutes.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Icaru
Buoyancy waves in Pluto's high atmosphere: Implications for stellar occultations
We apply scintillation theory to stellar signal fluctuations in the
high-resolution, high signal/noise, dual-wavelength data from the MMT
observation of the 2007 March 18 occultation of P445.3 by Pluto. A well-defined
high wavenumber cutoff in the fluctuations is consistent with viscous-thermal
dissipation of buoyancy waves (internal gravity waves) in Pluto's high
atmosphere, and provides strong evidence that the underlying density
fluctuations are governed by the gravity-wave dispersion relation.Comment: Accepted 18 June 2009 for publication in Icaru
De-biased Populations of Kuiper Belt Objects from the Deep Ecliptic Survey
The Deep Ecliptic Survey (DES) discovered hundreds of Kuiper Belt objects
from 1998-2005. Follow-up observations yielded 304 objects with good dynamical
classifications (Classical, Scattered, Centaur, or 16 mean-motion resonances
with Neptune). The DES search fields are well documented, enabling us to
calculate the probability of detecting objects with particular orbital
parameters and absolute magnitudes at a randomized point in each orbit.
Grouping objects together by dynamical class leads, we estimate the orbital
element distributions (a, e, i) for the largest three classes (Classical, 3:2,
and Scattered) using maximum likelihood. Using H-magnitude as a proxy for the
object size, we fit a power law to the number of objects for 8 classes with at
least 5 detected members (246 objects). The best Classical slope is
alpha=1.02+/-0.01 (observed from 5<=H<=7.2). Six dynamical classes (Scattered
plus 5 resonances) are consistent in slope with the Classicals, though the
absolute number of objects is scaled. The exception to the power law relation
are the Centaurs (non-resonant with perihelia closer than Neptune, and thus
detectable at smaller sizes), with alpha=0.42+/-0.02 (7.5<H<11). This is
consistent with a knee in the H-distribution around H=7.2 as reported elsewhere
(Bernstein et al. 2004, Fraser et al. 2014). Based on the Classical-derived
magnitude distribution, the total number of objects (H<=7) in each class are:
Classical (2100+/-300 objects), Scattered (2800+/-400), 3:2 (570+/-80), 2:1
(400+/-50), 5:2 (270+/-40), 7:4 (69+/-9), 5:3 (60+/-8). The independent
estimate for the number of Centaurs in the same H range is 13+/-5. If instead
all objects are divided by inclination into "Hot" and "Cold" populations,
following Fraser et al. (2014), we find that alphaHot=0.90+/-0.02, while
alphaCold=1.32+/-0.02, in good agreement with that work.Comment: 26 pages emulateapj, 6 figures, 5 tables, accepted by A
Charon's radius and density from the combined data sets of the 2005 July 11 occultation
The 2005 July 11 C313.2 stellar occultation by Charon was observed by three
separate research groups, including our own, at observatories throughout South
America. Here, the published timings from the three data sets have been
combined to more accurately determine the mean radius of Charon: 606.0 +/- 1.5
km. Our analysis indicates that a slight oblateness in the body (0.006 +/-
0.003) best matches the data, with a confidence level of 86%. The oblateness
has a pole position angle of 71.4 deg +/- 10.4 deg and is consistent with
Charon's pole position angle of 67 deg. Charon's mean radius corresponds to a
bulk density of 1.63 +/- 0.07 g/cm3, which is significantly less than Pluto's
(1.92 +/- 0.12 g/cm3). This density differential favors an impact formation
scenario for the system in which at least one of the impactors was
differentiated. Finally, unexplained differences between chord timings measured
at Cerro Pachon and the rest of the data set could be indicative of a
depression as deep as 7 km on Charon's limb.Comment: 25 pages including 4 tables and 2 figures. Submitted to the
Astronomical Journal on 2006 Feb 0
CC Sculptoris: A superhumping intermediate polar
We present high speed optical, spectroscopic and Swift X-ray observations
made during the dwarf nova superoutburst of CC Scl in November 2011. An orbital
period of 1.383 h and superhump period of 1.443 h were measured, but the
principal new finding is that CC Scl is a previously unrecognised intermediate
polar, with a white dwarf spin period of 389.49 s which is seen in both optical
and Swift X-ray light curves only during the outburst. In this it closely
resembles the old nova GK Per, but unlike the latter has one of the shortest
orbital periods among intermediate polars.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; 11 pages, 19 figure
Properties of the solar neighbor WISE J072003.20-084651.2
The severe crowding towards the Galactic plane suggests that the census of
nearby stars in that direction may be incomplete. Recently, Scholz reported a
new M9 object at an estimated distance d~7 pc (WISE J072003.20-084651.2;
hereafter WISE0720) at Galactic latitude b=2.3 degr.
Our goals are to determine the physical characteristics of WISE0720, its
kinematic properties, and to address the question if it is a binary object, as
suggested in the discovery paper.
Optical and infrared spectroscopy from the Southern African Large Telescope
and Magellan, respectively, and spectral energy distribution fitting were used
to determine the spectral type of WISE0720. The measured radial velocity,
proper motion and parallax yielded its Galactic velocities. We also
investigated if WISE0720 may show X-ray activity based on archival data.
Our spectra are consistent with spectral type L0+/-1. We find no evidence for
binarity, apart for a minor 2-sigma level difference in the radial velocities
taken at two different epochs. The spatial velocity of WISE0720 does not
connect it to any known moving group, instead it places the object with high
probability in the old thin disk or in the thick disk. The spectral energy
distribution fit hints at excess in the 12 and 22 micron WISE bands which may
be due to a redder companion, but the same excess is visible in other late type
objects, and it more likely implies a shortcoming of the models (e.g., issues
with the effective wavelengths of the filters for these extremely cool objects,
etc.) rather than a disk or redder companion. The optical spectrum shows some
Halpha emission, indicative of stellar activity. Archival X-ray observations
yield no detection.Comment: A&A, accepted; 9 pages, 6 figure
Comment on the sign of the Casimir force
I show that reflection positivity implies that the force between any mirror
pair of charge-conjugate probes of the quantum vacuum is attractive. This
generalizes a recent theorem of Kenneth and Klich to interacting quantum
fields, to arbitrary semiclassical bodies, and to quantized probes with
non-overlapping wavefunctions. I also prove that the torques on
charge-conjugate probes tend always to rotate them into a mirror-symmetric
position.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure, Latex file. Several points clarified and
expanded, two references added
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