Abstract
The field of asteroid thermophysical modeling has experienced an
extraordinary growth in the last ten years, as new thermal infrared data
became available for hundreds of thousands of asteroids. The infrared
emission of asteroids depends on the body's size, shape, albedo, thermal
inertia, roughness and rotational properties. These parameters can
therefore be derived by thermophysical modeling of infrared data.
Thermophysical modeling led to asteroid size estimates that were
confirmed at the few-percent level by later spacecraft visits. We
discuss how instrumentation advances now allow mid-infrared
interferometric observations as well as high-accuracy
spectro-photometry, posing their own set of thermal-modeling
challenges.We present major breakthroughs achieved in studies of the
thermal inertia, a sensitive indicator for the nature of asteroids
soils, allowing us, for instance, to determine the grain size of
asteroidal regoliths. Thermal inertia also governs non-gravitational
effects on asteroid orbits, requiring thermophysical modeling for
precise asteroid dynamical studies. The radiative heating of asteroids,
meteoroids, and comets from the Sun also governs the thermal stress in
surface material; only recently has it been recognized as a significant
weathering process. Asteroid space missions with thermal infrared
instruments are currently undergoing study at all major space agencies.
This will require a high level of sophistication of thermophysical
models in order to analyze high-quality spacecraft data.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Asteroids IV |
Editors | Patrick Michel, Francesca E. DeMeo, William F. Botke |
Place of Publication | tUSCON |
Publisher | University of Arizona Press |
Pages | 107-128 |
ISBN (Print) | 978-0-816-53213-1 |
Publication status | Published - 2015 |
Keywords
- Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics