(U)BVRI photometry of Trojan L5 asteroids
β Scribed by O. Karlsson; C.-I. Lagerkvist; B. Davidsson
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 432 KB
- Volume
- 199
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0019-1035
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β¦ Synopsis
BVRI photometry of 27 mainly small (β30 km) Trojans show that the previously reported size-spectral slope trend among Trojans and Hildas must be modified. The small-slope small-bodies gap present in previous works does not exist. This has also been noted by other recent reported observations. While the largest asteroids have slopes less than about 10% kΓ -1 the smallest asteroids have both small and large slopes. The maximum slope is about 15% kΓ -1 for all outer main belt groups (Cybeles, Hildas and Trojans). Combining observations from different authors reveal that these three groups have small asteroids (below 50 km) in the same slope range, while the large Trojans (β100 km) have in general significantly steeper slopes than Hildas and Cybeles of similar size. The size-slope trend would favor organic materials as mainly responsible for the reflectance properties of the surfaces.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The results of V-band polarimetric observations of the potentially hazardous near-Earth Asteroid (23187) 2000 PN 9 at large phase angles are presented as well as its photometric observations in BVRI bands. Observations were made in March-April 2006 during its close approach to the Earth using the 1.
The first Trojan asteroid occultation, the occultation of HIP 014402A by ( 1437) Diomedes, was successfully observed from Japan on November 7, 1997. From its occultation timings at six sites including two video observations, an elongated occultation silhouette of (180 Β± 28 km) Γ (96 Β± 5 km), at posi