12,897 research outputs found

    What makes a family reliable?

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    Asteroid families are clusters of asteroids in proper element space which are thought to be fragments from former collisions. Studies of families promise to improve understanding of large collision events and a large event can open up the interior of a former parent body to view. While a variety of searches for families have found the same heavily populated families, and some searches have found the same families of lower population, there is much apparent disagreement between proposed families of lower population of different investigations. Indicators of reliability, factors compromising reliability, an illustration of the influence of different data samples, and a discussion of how several investigations perceived families in the same region of proper element space are given

    Asteroid families

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    More than 100 asteroid families are presented in Williams. Several examples of cratering events are known including family numbers 150, 162, 169, and 189. These are recognizable as many small fragments adjacent to and to one side (in three dimensions) of a much larger cratered body. Family numbers 138 and 140 are adjacent in proper element space. In population they are an intermediate step between the long recognizable families and the more frequent less populated families. Family number 164 is the fifth most populous family in the belt. All members are faint and nothing is known of the physical properties

    Astrometric observations of asteroids and small bodies

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    Comets and asteroids are observed with the Palomar 1.5 m telescope using a charge coupled device (CCD) array. The goal is observations of astrometric quality (the reduction to position is separately funded) and the priorities are comets plus minor planets which are planet crossers, have high inclinations, or otherwise have unusual orbits. The stress is on recoveries of comets and asteroids seen at previous oppositions and follow up on newly discovered objects. Surveys and new discoveries are not being attempted. The modest amount of available dark time is used for faint objects, while brighter objects can be followed in the more plentiful light time. Since asteroids are usually discovered near perihelion when bright, the next several opportunities for recovery are normallly fainter. Thus recoveries and follow up with big telescopes complement surveys by smaller instruments. During the past year two periodic comets were recovered. They were P/Jackson-Neujmin (1987t) and P/Longmore (1987c1). Both were shared recoveries. A follow up observation of the newly-discovered comet Rudenko (1987u) appeared on an IAU card as did the newly discovered Comet Maury-Phinney (1988c). A magnitude 14.4 outburst of comet Schwassmann-Wachmann 1 was recorded at the end of May and was reported on an IAU card

    Low-temperature magnetic properties of magnetite

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