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Photometric modeling of a cometary nucleus: taking Hapke modeling to the limit
CCD photometry of 2060 Chiron, 1991 January
Observations of 2060 Chiron was performed on 7 to 8 Jan. 1991 with the Mt. Palomar 1.52 m telescope in the Gunn-R passband. On-chip field stars were used to perform differential reductions. The repeatability of the 5.9 hour light curve was excellent, both within a night and from night to night. No evidence for short-term secular variations similar to those seen last year by both Luu and Jewitt (1990) and Buratti and Dunbar (1991) is seen in the new light curve. Chiron's rotational light curve appears strikingly similar to that obtained a year earlier by Luu and Jewitt (1990), both in amplitude and shape. Both light curves show strongly correlated changes over a timescale of perhaps 15 minutes. These same features were marginally visible in the 1986 light curve. Such behavior is believed to be evidence that Chiron may be more aspherical than the 4 percent intensity variation might otherwise indicate, and favors a viewing geometry where the subearth latitude is rather low. Chiron was much fainter in 1985, when a partial light curve was obtained by Marcialis. Due to the lower sampling rate of these early data, no conclusions can be made regarding the high-frequency light curve structure back then. All three of these light curves differ significantly from that obtained by Buratti and Dunbar (1991), one week before the observations of Luu and Jewitt. The Chiron field was calibrated using Landolt standards on Ut 15 Mar. 1991. A mean R-magnitude of 15.6 + or - 0.1 was found. Variability of 2060 Chiron was demonstrated over timescales of minutes, hours, and years. An intense campaign was urged to monitor the photometric behavior of Chiron throughout the 1990s
Bidirectional reflectance properties of planetary surface materials
Laboratory measurements using a spectrogoniometer to separate the effects of surficial texture and albedo in the characterization of planetary surface materials are discussed. An investigation of the surface of Io is discussed. A number of technical improvements to the goniometer are summarized
Cyclic cycle systems of the complete multipartite graph
In this paper, we study the existence problem for cyclic -cycle
decompositions of the graph , the complete multipartite graph with
parts of size , and give necessary and sufficient conditions for their
existence in the case that
Evidence of Titan's Climate History from Evaporite Distribution
Water-ice-poor, 5-m-bright material on Saturn's moon Titan has
previously been geomorphologically identified as evaporitic. Here we present a
global distribution of the occurrences of the 5-m-bright spectral unit,
identified with Cassini's Visual Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) and
examined with RADAR when possible. We explore the possibility that each of
these occurrences are evaporite deposits. The 5-m-bright material covers
1\% of Titan's surface and is not limited to the poles (the only regions with
extensive, long-lived surface liquid). We find the greatest areal concentration
to be in the equatorial basins Tui Regio and Hotei Regio. Our interpretations,
based on the correlation between 5-m-bright material and lakebeds, imply
that there was enough liquid present at some time to create the observed
5-m-bright material. We address the climate implications surrounding a
lack of evaporitic material at the south polar basins: if the south pole basins
were filled at some point in the past, then where is the evaporite
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