191 research outputs found
Dust production rates in Jupiter-family Comets: A two-year study with ATLAS photometry
Jupiter-family Comets (JFCs) exhibit a wide range of activity levels and
mass-loss over their orbits. We analyzed high-cadence observations of 42 active
JFCs with the wide-field Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS)
survey in 2020-2021. We measured dust production rates of the JFCs using the
Af\rho parameter and its variation as a function of heliocentric distance.
There is a tendency for our JFC sample to exhibit a maximum Af\rho after
perihelion, with 254P/McNaught and P/2020 WJ5 (Lemmon) having their maximum
Af\rho over a year after perihelion. On average, the rate of change of activity
post-perihelion was shallower than that pre-perihelion. We also estimated the
mass maximum loss rate for 17 of the JFCs in our sample, finding 4P/Faye to be
the most active. We present a subset of comets whose measured Af\rho have been
interpolated and extrapolated to a common distance of 2 au pre-perihelion and
post-perihelion. From these measurements we found no correlation of intrinsic
activity with current perihelion distance. For three of the JFCs in our sample,
6P/d'Arrest, 156P/Russell-LINEAR and 254P/McNaught, there was no visible coma
but a constant absolute magnitude which we attributed to a probable detection
of the nucleus. We derived upper limits for the nuclear radii of \leq 2.1 +/-
0.3 km, \leq 2.0 +/- 0.2 km and \leq 4.0 +/- 0.8 km respectively. Finally, we
found that 4P/Faye, 108P/Ciffreo, 132P/Helin-Roman-Alu 2, 141P/Machholz 2, and
398P/Boattini experienced outbursts between 2020 and 2022.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Planetary Science Journal (PSJ
Constraints on the Progenitor of SN 2016gkg From Its Shock-Cooling Light Curve
SN 2016gkg is a nearby Type IIb supernova discovered shortly after explosion.
Like several other Type IIb events with early-time data, SN 2016gkg displays a
double-peaked light curve, with the first peak associated with the cooling of a
low-mass extended progenitor envelope. We present unprecedented
intranight-cadence multi-band photometric coverage of the first light-curve
peak of SN 2016gkg obtained from the Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope
network, the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System, the Swift satellite
and various amateur-operated telescopes. Fitting these data to analytical
shock-cooling models gives a progenitor radius of ~25-140 solar radii with
~2-30 x 10^-2 solar masses of material in the extended envelope (depending on
the model and the assumed host-galaxy extinction). Our radius estimates are
broadly consistent with values derived independently (in other works) from HST
imaging of the progenitor star. However, the shock-cooling model radii are on
the lower end of the values indicated by pre-explosion imaging. Hydrodynamical
simulations could refine the progenitor parameters deduced from the
shock-cooling emission and test the analytical models.Comment: Accepted by ApJ
ATLAS: A High-Cadence All-Sky Survey System
Technology has advanced to the point that it is possible to image the entire
sky every night and process the data in real time. The sky is hardly static:
many interesting phenomena occur, including variable stationary objects such as
stars or QSOs, transient stationary objects such as supernovae or M dwarf
flares, and moving objects such as asteroids and the stars themselves. Funded
by NASA, we have designed and built a sky survey system for the purpose of
finding dangerous near-Earth asteroids (NEAs). This system, the "Asteroid
Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System" (ATLAS), has been optimized to produce
the best survey capability per unit cost, and therefore is an efficient and
competitive system for finding potentially hazardous asteroids (PHAs) but also
for tracking variables and finding transients. While carrying out its NASA
mission, ATLAS now discovers more bright () supernovae candidates than
any ground based survey, frequently detecting very young explosions due to its
2 day cadence. ATLAS discovered the afterglow of a gamma-ray burst independent
of the high energy trigger and has released a variable star catalogue of
5 sources. This, the first of a series of articles describing
ATLAS, is devoted to the design and performance of the ATLAS system. Subsequent
articles will describe in more detail the software, the survey strategy,
ATLAS-derived NEA population statistics, transient detections, and the first
data release of variable stars and transient lightcurves.Comment: 26 pages, 12 figures, submitted to PAS
Brightness variation distributions among main belt asteroids from sparse light curve sampling with Pan-STARRS 1
The rotational state of asteroids is controlled by various physical
mechanisms including collisions, internal damping and the
Yarkovsky-O'Keefe-Radzievskii-Paddack (YORP) effect. We have analysed the
changes in magnitude between consecutive detections of approximately 60,000
asteroids measured by the PanSTARRS 1 survey during its first 18 months of
operations. We have attempted to explain the derived brightness changes
physically and through the application of a simple model. We have found a
tendency toward smaller magnitude variations with decreasing diameter for
objects of 1 < D < 8 km. Assuming the shape distribution of objects in this
size range to be independent of size and composition our model suggests a
population with average axial ratios 1 : 0.85 \pm 0.13 : 0.71 \pm 0.13, with
larger objects more likely to have spin axes perpendicular to the orbital
plane.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, accepted by MNRA
Observational Constraints on the Catastrophic Disruption Rate of Small Main Belt Asteroids
We have calculated 90% confidence limits on the steady-state rate of
catastrophic disruptions of main belt asteroids in terms of the absolute
magnitude at which one catastrophic disruption occurs per year (HCL) as a
function of the post-disruption increase in brightness (delta m) and subsequent
brightness decay rate (tau). The confidence limits were calculated using the
brightest unknown main belt asteroid (V = 18.5) detected with the Pan-STARRS1
(Pan-STARRS1) telescope. We measured the Pan-STARRS1's catastrophic disruption
detection efficiency over a 453-day interval using the Pan-STARRS moving object
processing system (MOPS) and a simple model for the catastrophic disruption
event's photometric behavior in a small aperture centered on the catastrophic
disruption event. Our simplistic catastrophic disruption model suggests that
delta m = 20 mag and 0.01 mag d-1 < tau < 0.1 mag d-1 which would imply that H0
= 28 -- strongly inconsistent with H0,B2005 = 23.26 +/- 0.02 predicted by
Bottke et al. (2005) using purely collisional models. We postulate that the
solution to the discrepancy is that > 99% of main belt catastrophic disruptions
in the size range to which this study was sensitive (100 m) are not
impact-generated, but are instead due to fainter rotational breakups, of which
the recent discoveries of disrupted asteroids P/2013 P5 and P/2013 R3 are
probable examples. We estimate that current and upcoming asteroid surveys may
discover up to 10 catastrophic disruptions/year brighter than V = 18.5.Comment: 61 Pages, 10 Figures, 3 Table
A First Catalog of Variable Stars Measured by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS)
The Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) carries out its
primary planetary defense mission by surveying about 13000 deg^2 at least four
times per night. The resulting data set is useful for the discovery of variable
stars to a magnitude limit fainter than r~18, with amplitudes down to 0.01 mag
for bright objects. Here we present a Data Release One catalog of variable
stars based on analyzing 142 million stars measured at least 100 times in the
first two years of ATLAS operations. Using a Lomb-Scargle periodogram and other
variability metrics, we identify 4.7 million candidate variables which we
analyze in detail. Through Space Telescope Science Institute, we publicly
release lightcurves for all of them, together with a vector of 169
classification features for each star. We do this at the level of unconfirmed
candidate variables in order to provide the community with a large set of
homogeneously analyzed photometry and avoid pre-judging which types of objects
others may find most interesting. We use machine learning to classify the
candidates into fifteen different broad categories based on lightcurve
morphology. About 10% (430,000 stars) pass extensive tests designed to screen
out spurious variability detections: we label these as `probable' variables. Of
these, 230,000 receive specific classifications as eclipsing binaries,
pulsating, Mira-type, or sinusoidal variables: these are the `classified'
variables. New discoveries among the probable variables number more than
300,000, while 150,000 of the classified variables are new, including about
10,000 pulsating variables, 2,000 Mira stars, and 70,000 eclipsing binaries.Comment: Accepted by AJ; gives instructions for querying ATLAS variable star
database; this new version has nicer lightcurve figure
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