developed a nonlinearized, finite-difference solution to the heat equation that yields orbital rates of change due to the Yarkovsky effect for small, spherical, bare-rock asteroids and used it to investigate changes in semimajor axis caused by the Yarkovsky effect. Here, we present results for chang
Numerical Evaluation of the General Yarkovsky Effect: Effects on Semimajor Axis
โ Scribed by Joseph Spitale; Richard Greenberg
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 235 KB
- Volume
- 149
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0019-1035
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The Yarkovsky effect may play a key role in the orbital evolution of asteroids and near-Earth objects. To evaluate the acceleration under a wide range of conditions, a three-dimensional finite-difference solution to the heat equation is applied to homogeneous, spherical stony bodies with 1-, 10-, and 100-m diameters. This approach employs neither the linearized boundary conditions, the plane-parallel heat flow approximation, nor the assumption of fast rotation used in earlier work. Thus we can explore a wide range of orbital elements and physical properties. Our work agrees well with earlier results in the regimes where their approximations are valid. We investigate a wide range of spin states, including both the "seasonal" (very fast rotation) and "diurnal" (zero obliquity) extremes of the Yarkovsky effect. We find that, for orbits with high eccentricity, the semimajor axis can change much faster than for circular orbits. For such orbits, the orientation of the rotation axis with respect to the direction of pericenter is critical in determining the evolution. A stony main-belt asteroid of diameter 1 m on a high-eccentricity orbit could change its semimajor axis by more than 1 AU in 1.5 Myr.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The effect of viscosity on the noise generated by interactions of simple axisymmetric vorticity structures is numerically investigated. A low Mach number is assumed, and hence the feedback of the acoustic field on the flow can be neglected. With this assumption, Lighthill's acoustic analogy enables
This paper analyses the shape effect on the tensile strength of axisymmetric rock specimens by an improved adaptive dynamic relaxation method. It is shown that the present approach is convenient and &cient. Numerical results for spheroidal specimens with different shapes reveal the variation of stre
The following facts have been established f o r the spiral growth of the spore-bearing cell of Phycomyces : 1. The inclination of the axis of spiral growth may be influenced by change of temperature, or may occasionally exhibit slow spontaneous change. 2. The inclination varies significantly from
Dugesia dorotocephala and D. tigrina were sectioned transversely, imbedded in agar, and exposed to alternating current in a rectangular chamber. At field strengths of from 310 to 418.4 rms mv/mm potential fall, functional bipolar, regressive bipolar and permanent bipolar regenerants were produced. N