research

Multiband photometry of a Patroclus-Menoetius mutual event: Constraints on surface heterogeneity

Abstract

We present the first complete multiband observations of a binary asteroid mutual event. We obtained high-cadence, high-signal-to-noise photometry of the UT 2018 April 9 inferior shadowing event in the Jupiter Trojan binary system Patroclus-Menoetius in four Sloan bands - gg', rr', ii', and zz'. We use an eclipse lightcurve model to fit for a precise mid-eclipse time and estimate the minimum separation of the two eclipsing components during the event. Our best-fit mid-eclipse time of 2458217.809430.00050+0.000572458217.80943^{+0.00057}_{-0.00050} is 19 minutes later than the prediction of Grundy et al. (2018); the minimum separation between the center of Menoetius' shadow and the center of Patroclus is 72.5±0.772.5\pm0.7 km - slightly larger than the predicted 69.5 km. Using the derived lightcurves, we find no evidence for significant albedo variations or large-scale topographic features on the Earth-facing hemisphere and limb of Patroclus. We also apply the technique of eclipse mapping to place an upper bound of \sim0.15 mag on wide-scale surface color variability across Patroclus.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in A

    Similar works