The Cool Surfaces of Binaries Near-Earth Asteroids

  • Marco Delbo
  • , K. Walsh
  • , M. Mueller

OnderzoeksoutputAcademic

Samenvatting

We present results from thermal-infrared observations of binary near-Earth asteroids (NEAs). These objects, in general, have surface temperatures cooler than the average values for non-binary NEAs. We discuss how this may be evidence of higher-than-average surface thermal inertia. The comparison of these binary NEAs with all NEAs and rapidly rotating NEAs suggests a binary formation mechanism capable of altering surface properties, possibly removing regolith: an obvious candidate is the YORP effect. --- Acknowledgments This research was carried out while Marco Delbo and Kevin Walsh were Henri Poincare Fellows at the Observatoire de la Cote d'Azur. The Henri Poincare Fellowship is funded by the CNRS-INSU, the Conseil General des Alpes-Maritimes and the Rotary International -- District 1730.
Originele taal-2English
Pagina's (van-tot)433
TijdschriftBulletin of the American Astronomical Society
Volume40
StatusPublished - 1-sep.-2008
Evenement40th DPS meeting, Amerivan Astronomical Society, 2008 - Ithaca, NY, United States
Duur: 10-okt.-200815-okt.-2008

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