662 research outputs found
YORP torque as the function of shape harmonics
The second order analytical approximation of the mean YORP torque components
is given as an explicit function of the shape spherical harmonics coefficients
for a sufficiently regular minor body. The results are based upon a new
expression for the insolation function, significantly simpler than in previous
works. Linearized plane parallel model of the temperature distribution derived
from the insolation function allows to take into account a nonzero
conductivity. Final expressions for the three average components of the YORP
torque related with rotation period, obliquity, and precession are given in a
form of Legendre series of the cosine of obliquity. The series have good
numerical properties and can be easily truncated according to the degree of
Legendre polynomials or associated functions, with first two terms playing the
principal role. The present version fixes the errors discovered in the text
that appeared in Monthly Notices RAS (388, pp. 297-944).Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures, published Mon. Not. R.A.S with minor errors that
are corrected in the present versio
The Influence of Rough Surface Thermal-Infrared Beaming on the Yarkovsky and YORP Effects
It is now becoming widely accepted that photon recoil forces from the
asymmetric reflection and thermal re-radiation of absorbed sunlight are,
together with collisions and gravitational forces, primary mechanisms governing
the dynamical and physical evolution of asteroids. The Yarkovsky effect causes
orbital semi-major axis drift and the YORP effect causes changes in the
rotation rate and pole orientation. We present an adaptation of the Advanced
Thermophysical Model (ATPM) to simultaneously predict the Yarkovsky and YORP
effects in the presence of thermal-infrared beaming caused by surface
roughness, which has been neglected or dismissed in all previous models. Tests
on Gaussian random sphere shaped asteroids, and on the real shapes of asteroids
(1620) Geographos and (6489) Golevka, show that rough surface thermal-infrared
beaming enhances the Yarkovsky orbital drift by typically tens of percent but
it can be as much as a factor of two. The YORP rotational acceleration is on
average dampened by up to a third typically but can be as much as one half. We
find that the Yarkovsky orbital drift is only sensitive to the average degree,
and not to the spatial distribution, of roughness across an asteroid surface.
However, the YORP rotational acceleration is sensitive to the surface roughness
spatial distribution, and can add significant uncertainties to the predictions
for asteroids with relatively weak YORP effects. To accurately predict either
effect the degree and spatial distribution of roughness across an asteroid
surface must be known.Comment: 49 pages, 21 figures, 4 tables. Accepted by MNRA
Stress field and spin axis relaxation for inelastic triaxial ellipsoids
A compact formula for the stress tensor inside a self-gravitating, triaxial
ellipsoid in an arbitrary rotation state is given. It contains no singularity
in the incompressible medium limit. The stress tensor and the quality factor
model are used to derive a solution for the energy dissipation resulting in the
damping (short axis mode) or excitation (long axis) of wobbling. In the limit
of an ellipsoid of revolution, we compare our solution with earlier ones and
show that, with appropriate corrections, the differences in damping times
estimates are much smaller than it has been claimed.
This version implements corrections of misprints found in the MNRAS published
text.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, published in Monthly Notices RAS (containing
misprints
Note on the generalized Hansen and Laplace coefficients
Recently, Breiter et al (2004) reported the computation of Hansen
coefficients for non integer values of . In fact, the
Hansen coefficients are closely related to the Laplace , and
generalized Laplace coefficients (Laskar and Robutel, 1995)
that do not require to be integers. In particular, the coefficients
X_0^{\g,m} have very simple expressions in terms of the usual Laplace
coefficients b_{\g+2}^{(m)}, and all their properties derive easily from the
known properties of the Laplace coefficients.Comment: 9/11/200
Yarkovsky-O’Keefe-Radzievskii-Paddack effect on tumbling objects
A semi-analytical model of the Yarkovsky–O’Keefe–Radzievskii–Paddack (YORP) effect on an asteroid spin in a non-principal axis rotation state is developed. The model describes the spin-state evolution in Deprit–Elipe variables, first-order averaged with respect to rotation and Keplerian orbital motion. Assuming zero conductivity, the YORP torque is represented by spherical harmonic series with vectorial coefficients, allowing us to use any degree and order of approximation. Within the quadrupole approximation of the illumination function we find the same first integrals involving rotational momentum, obliquity and dynamical inertia that were obtained by Cicaló & Scheeres. The integrals do not exist when higher degree terms of the illumination function are included, and then the asymptotic states known from Vokrouhlický et al. appear. This resolves an apparent contradiction between earlier results. Averaged equations of motion admit stable and unstable limit cycle solutions that were not previously detected. Non-averaged numerical integration by the Taylor series method for an exemplary shape of 3103 Eger is in good agreement with the semi-analytical theory
Orbital similarity functions - application to asteroid pairs
The paper expands the idea of VokrouhlickĂ˝ and NesvornĂ˝ who used a modified ZappalĂ et al. metric with osculating elements in search for pairs of asteroids suspected of having a common origin. Using six different orbital similarity functions, we find that five of them display a similar excess of close pairs in the catalogue of osculating elements. The excess is even higher when mean orbital elements are used. Similarly, when the mean elements are applied, there is a better agreement between the closest pairs found in the same catalogue using different metrics. The common subset of 62 pairs from five lists of 100 closest pairs according to different distance functions is provided. Investigating an artificial sample of asteroid orbital pairs with a known initial orbital velocity difference we find that the Drummond metric best preserves orbital proximity over long time intervals
The role of spatial frequency information for ERP components sensitive to faces and emotional facial expression
To investigate the impact of spatial frequency on emotional facial expression analysis, ERPs were recorded in response to low spatial frequency (LSF), high spatial frequency (HSF), and unfiltered broad spatial frequency (BSF) faces with fearful or neutral expressions, houses, and chairs. In line with previous findings, BSF fearful facial expressions elicited a greater frontal positivity than BSF neutral facial expressions, starting at about 150 ms after stimulus onset. In contrast, this emotional expression effect was absent for HSF and LSF faces. Given that some brain regions involved in emotion processing, such as amygdala and connected structures, are selectively tuned to LSF visual inputs, these data suggest that ERP effects of emotional facial expression do not directly reflect activity in these regions. It is argued that higher order neocortical brain systems are involved in the generation of emotion-specific waveform modulations. The face-sensitive N170 component was neither affected by emotional facial expression nor by spatial frequency information
Analysis of the rotation period of asteroids (1865) Cerberus, (2100) Ra-Shalom, and (3103) Eger - search for the YORP effect
The spin state of small asteroids can change on a long timescale by the
Yarkovsky-O'Keefe-Radzievskii-Paddack (YORP) effect, the net torque that arises
from anisotropically scattered sunlight and proper thermal radiation from an
irregularly-shaped asteroid. The secular change in the rotation period caused
by the YORP effect can be detected by analysis of asteroid photometric
lightcurves. We analyzed photometric lightcurves of near-Earth asteroids (1865)
Cerberus, (2100) Ra-Shalom, and (3103) Eger with the aim to detect possible
deviations from the constant rotation caused by the YORP effect. We carried out
new photometric observations of the three asteroids, combined the new
lightcurves with archived data, and used the lightcurve inversion method to
model the asteroid shape, pole direction, and rotation rate. The YORP effect
was modeled as a linear change in the rotation rate in time d\omega /dt. Values
of d\omega/ dt derived from observations were compared with the values
predicted by theory. We derived physical models for all three asteroids. We had
to model Eger as a nonconvex body because the convex model failed to fit the
lightcurves observed at high phase angles. We probably detected the
acceleration of the rotation rate of Eger d\omega / dt = (1.4 +/- 0.6) x
10^{-8} rad/d (3\sigma error), which corresponds to a decrease in the rotation
period by 4.2 ms/yr. The photometry of Cerberus and Ra-Shalom was consistent
with a constant-period model, and no secular change in the spin rate was
detected. We could only constrain maximum values of |d\omega / dt| < 8 x
10^{-9} rad/d for Cerberus, and |d\omega / dt| < 3 x 10^{-8} rad/d for
Ra-Shalom
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