Asteroid |
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albedo | Type | H(90,0) | G | m |
225 Henrietta | 120 | 0.040 | F | 8.57 | (0.04) | 0.031 |
360 Carlova | 116 | 0.054 | C | 8.13 | (0.04) | (0.010) |
416 Vaticana | 85 | 0.169 | S | 7.84 | 0.30 | 0.026 |
516 Amherstia | 73 | 0.163 | M | 8.09 | (0.21) | 0.038 |
1223 Neckar | S | 10.61 | (0.23) | 0.017 |
Sidereal | Sense of | Pole 1 | Pole 2 | a/b | b/c | Method | Reference | ||
period (days) | rotation |
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225 Henrietta | |||||||||
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1.23 | 1.08 | EAM | Present work | ||||
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360 Carlova | |||||||||
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1.57 | 1.00 | EA | Dotto et al. (1995) | ||
0.2578997 | P | ![]() |
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1.42 | 1.52 | EAM | Present work | ||
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416 Vaticana | |||||||||
0.2238486 | P | ![]() |
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1.55 | 1.20 | EAM | Present work | ||
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0.2238486 | P | ![]() |
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1.45 | 1.17 | EAM | Present work | ||
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516 Amherstia | |||||||||
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1.83 | 1.85 | EA | De Angelis (1995) | ||
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1.53 | 1.23 | EAM | Micha![]() |
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0.3116334 | P | ![]() |
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1.36 | 1.82 | EAM | Present work | ||
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0.3116332 | R | ![]() |
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1.36 | 1.81 | EAM | Present work | ||
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1223 Neckar | |||||||||
0.3232105 | P | ![]() |
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1.47 | 1.28 | EAM | Present work |
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The spin vectors, sidreal periods, and triaxial ellipsoid models
for the observed asteroids were determined by the method described by
Michaowski (1993). In this method the magnitudes, amplitudes, and epochs of
maxima are considered. The results were obtained by building a set of nonlinear
equations whose solution was found by least square fitting.
The observed amplitudes and magnitudes of the brightness maxima were reduced
to zero phase angle by using the amplitude-phase (Zappala et al. 1990) and
the HG-magnitude system (Bowell et al. 1989), respectively.
As described by Michaowski (1993), the method had two-fold ambiguity
in the location of an asteroid pole when the sense of rotation was fixed.
This problem was also discussed earlier in a review paper by Magnusson et al. (1989).
They stated that by combining the solutions from amplitude-magnitude
and epoch methods, it was sometimes possible to obtain a unique solution
even though each individual method had failed to achive this. However, they did
not discuss when such situations were possible.
The method used in the present paper combines these
methods (instead of solutions alone) in one process of calculation as mentioned
above. From the results obtained here (see below) and in other papers
(Michaowski 1993, 1996; Micha
owski et al. 1995;
Kryszczynska et al. 1996) we can also state that in some cases it is possible to obtain a unique
solution for the pole location. This possibility can sometimes occur when an
asteroid is observed during a few oppositions and the ecliptic latitudes are
within a wide range of values
(usually from about
to
). An example of such an asteroid in
the present work is 360 Carlova (see below). We have also noticed that for an
asteroid which has always been observed in low ecliptic latitudes (e.g. 1223
Neckar from the present study), we have obtained two solutions for its pole
coordinates and the two-fold ambiguity is not broken.
The basic parameters of the asteroids are summarized in Table 2. Their
IRAS diameters (D) and albedos are taken from The Small Bodies Node
of the NASA Planetary Data System (http://pdssbn.astro.umd.edu/),
while the taxonomic types are from Tholen (1989). The maximum brightness of the asteroid
obtained for aspect
and zero solar angle
H(90,0) is shown in the next column. The last two columns display the G and mvalues obtained during reduction the magnitudes and amplitudes to zero
phase angle, respectively. If the existing data were insufficient for such
reduction, the average value for a given taxonomic type was taken:
from Harris (1989) for G parameter and
from Zappala et al. (1990) for m. The assumed values are given in parentheses. This
table is not complete as the asteroid 1223 Neckar was not observed by the IRASsatellite.
Table 3 contains the spin and shape models for the asteroids studied in the present paper. This table shows the sidereal periods, the senses of rotation (P - prograde, R - retrograde), the ecliptic coordinates (equinox 2000) of the north poles, and the ratios a/b, b/c of triaxial ellipsoid models. The available results obtained by other authors are given for comparison. The methods, used for calculation, are also given (E - Epochs, A - Amplitude, M - Magnitude). If no previous results are listed in Table 3, it means the results from the present work are the first published ones for a given asteroid.
No model has been previously reported for this asteroid. We have used the data from four
oppositions: 1982, 1983, 1987, and 1995. During these apparitions the ecliptic latitude of
Henrietta ranged from
to
.
The results are presented in Table 3.
The available data are insufficient for obtaining a unique solution for the
sidereal period and sense of rotation. New observations are needed to improve
the presented preliminary results.
Dotto et al. (1995) used the EA method and data from three oppositions (1979,
1984, 1986) and obtained a model of this asteroid (see Table 3). We
were
able to calculate the model of Carlova using the lightcurves from six
apparitions: 1979, 1984, 1986, 1996, 1997, 1998 (ecliptic latitude from
to
). The results are presented
in Table 3. We determined the sidereal period and the prograde rotation
of this asteroid. The coordinates of the north pole are close to the first solution of
Dotto et al. (1995) and a/b is a little smaller than that obtained by these authors.
The difference in the ratios b/c obtained by Dotto et al. (1995) and in the present
study is much greater. Dotto et al. (1995) used only the EA method and the A
approch is not so good for b/c determination. The magnitude (M) method is a
much better indicator for b/c and such a method has also been used in the
present work (see Micha
owski 1993 for details).
There is no previously published model for this asteroid. We have lightcurves
from 1985, 1989, 1995-96, and 1998. The unique value of the
sidereal period and prograde sense of rotation have been obtained
(see Table 3).
The ecliptic latitudes of Vaticana during these four apparitions varied from
to
but the two-fold ambiguity still exists (see table).
It is probably due to the small number of observed oppositions and the future
observations should help to resolve this ambiguity.
Using the lightcurves from three oppositions (1978, 1985, 1989), De Angelis (1995)
and Michaowski (1996) obtained slightly different parameters,
especially for the triaxial ellipsoid model (see Table 3). This problem was
analyzed earlier by Micha
owski (1996).
The data from five oppositions (1978, 1985, 1989, 1995, 1996) allowed us to determine a model of this asteroid (Table 3). Unfortunately, we have obtained two similar solutions for both prograde and retrograde senses of rotation (the ecliptic coordinates for these solutions indicate two poles of the same axis of rotation). It probably means that Amherstia has a spin vector located in the ecliptic plane. For such asteroids the sense of rotation is undefined.
For this asteroid, the data obtained during seven apparitions (1977, 1983, 1987,
1989, 1990, 1993, 1995-96) are available. The model is given
in Table 3. As the ecliptic latitude of Neckar is always close to zero
(from
to
during previous oppositions), two solutions for the
north pole have been obtained. The available lightcurves have allowed us to obtain
the unique value for the sidereal period and the prograde sense of rotation.
The results presented here are the first ones published for 1223 Neckar.
Acknowledgements
This work was partially supported by the Polish KBN Grants 2 P03D 024 09 and 2 P03D 007 18.
Copyright The European Southern Observatory (ESO)