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result(s) for
"Ostro, Steven J."
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Radar Imaging of Binary Near-Earth Asteroid (66391) 1999 KW4
by
Broschart, Stephen B
,
Benner, Lance A.M
,
Scheeres, Daniel J
in
Asteroids
,
Astronomy
,
bulk density
2006
High-resolution radar images reveal near-Earth asteroid (66391) 1999 KW4 to be a binary system. The ~1.5-kilometer-diameter primary (Alpha) is an unconsolidated gravitational aggregate with a spin period ~2.8 hours, bulk density ~2 grams per cubic centimeter, porosity ~50%, and an oblate shape dominated by an equatorial ridge at the object's potential-energy minimum. The ~0.5-kilometer secondary (Beta) is elongated and probably is denser than Alpha. Its average orbit about Alpha is circular with a radius ~2.5 kilometers and period ~17.4 hours, and its average rotation is synchronous with the long axis pointed toward Alpha, but librational departures from that orientation are evident. Exotic physical and dynamical properties may be common among near-Earth binaries.
Journal Article
Titan's Rotation Reveals an Internal Ocean and Changing Zonal Winds
by
Ostro, Steven J
,
Kirk, Randolph L
,
Lorenz, Ralph D
in
Angular momentum
,
Astronomy
,
Atmosphere
2008
Cassini radar observations of Saturn's moon Titan over several years show that its rotational period is changing and is different from its orbital period. The present-day rotation period difference from synchronous spin leads to a shift of ~0.36° per year in apparent longitude and is consistent with seasonal exchange of angular momentum between the surface and Titan's dense superrotating atmosphere, but only if Titan's crust is decoupled from the core by an internal water ocean like that on Europa.
Journal Article
Spin Rate of Asteroid (54509) 2000 PH5 Increasing Due to the YORP Effect
by
Benner, Lance A.M
,
Ostro, Steven J
,
Magri, Christopher
in
Acceleration
,
Asteroids
,
Asteroids (minor planets)
2007
Radar and optical observations reveal that the continuous increase in the spin rate of near-Earth asteroid (54509) 2000 PH5 can be attributed to the Yarkovsky-O'Keefe-Radzievskii-Paddack (YORP) effect, a torque due to sunlight. The change in spin rate is in reasonable agreement with theoretical predictions for the YORP acceleration of a body with the radar-determined size, shape, and spin state of 2000 PH5. The detection of asteroid spin-up supports the YORP effect as an explanation for the anomalous distribution of spin rates for asteroids under 10 kilometers in diameter and as a binary formation mechanism.
Journal Article
Direct Detection of the Yarkovsky Effect by Radar Ranging to Asteroid 6489 Golevka
by
Chamberlin, Alan B.
,
Nolan, Michael C.
,
Ostro, Steven J.
in
Asteroids
,
Asteroids (minor planets)
,
Astronomy
2003
Radar ranging from Arecibo, Puerto Rico, to the 0.5-kilometer near-Earth asteroid 6489 Golevka unambiguously reveals a small nongravitational acceleration caused by the anisotropic thermal emission of absorbed sunlight. The magnitude of this perturbation, known as the Yarkovsky effect, is a function of the asteroid's mass and surface thermal characteristics. Direct detection of the Yarkovsky effect on asteroids will help constrain their physical properties, such as bulk density, and refine their orbital paths. Based on the strength of the detected perturbation, we estimate the bulk density of Golevka to be$2.7_{-0.6}^{+0.4}$grams per cubic centimeter.
Journal Article
Radar Evidence for Liquid Surfaces on Titan
by
Black, Gregory J.
,
Carter, Lynn M.
,
Ostro, Steven J.
in
Astronomical Phenomena
,
Astronomy
,
Atmosphere
2003
Arecibo radar observations of Titan at 13-centimeter wavelength indicate that most of the echo power is in a diffusely scattered component but that a small specular component is present for about 75% of the subearth locations observed. These specular echoes have properties consistent with those expected for areas of liquid hydrocarbons. Knowledge of the areal extent and depth of any deposits of liquid hydrocarbons could strongly constrain the history of Titan's atmosphere and surface.
Journal Article
Radar Observations of Asteroid 216 Kleopatra
by
Nolan, Michael C.
,
Ostro, Steven J.
,
Magri, Christopher
in
Asteroids
,
Astronomical objects
,
Astronomy
2000
Radar observations of the main-belt, M-class asteroid 216 Kleopatra reveal a dumbbell-shaped object with overall dimensions of 217 kilometers by 94 kilometers by 81 kilometers (±25%). The asteroid's surface properties are consistent with a regolith having a metallic composition and a porosity comparable to that of lunar soil. Kleopatra's shape is probably the outcome of an exotic sequence of collisional events, and much of its interior may have an unconsolidated rubble-pile structure.
Journal Article
Shape and Non-Principal Axis Spin State of Asteroid 4179 Toutatis
1995
Radar observations of Toutatis placed hundreds to thousands of pixels per image on the asteroid and revealed it to be a non-principal axis rotator. The radar data are used to calculate Toutatis's three-dimensional shape, spin state, and the ratios of the principal moments of inertia. Toutatis is rotating in a long-axis mode characterized by periods of 5.41 days (rotation about the long axis) and 7.35 days (average for long-axis precession), and its dimensions along the principal axes are 1.92, 2.40, and 4.60 kilometers. To within the model's uncertainties, Toutatis's density is homogeneous, or its inhomogeneities mimic the inertia tensor of a homogeneous body.
Journal Article
Radar Images of Asteroid 4179 Toutatis
by
Chandler, John F.
,
Campbell, Donald B.
,
Perillat, Phil
in
Asteroids
,
Asteroids (minor planets)
,
Astrometry
1995
Delay-Doppler images of the Earth-crossing asteroid 4179 Toutatis achieve resolutions as fine as 125 nanoseconds (19 meters in range) and 8.3 millihertz (0.15 millimeter per second in radial velocity) and place hundreds to thousands of pixels on the asteroid, which appears to be several kilometers long, topographically bifurcated, and heavily cratered. The image sequence reveals Toutatis to be in an extremely slow, non-principal axis rotation state.
Journal Article
Radar Detection of Iapetus
2004
Black et al discuss the radar detection of the Saturn's satellite lapetus. Saturn's satellite lapetus has the largest albedo asymmetry of any natural satellite, with the optical albedo of its trailing hemisphere as much as 10 times that of its leading hemisphere.
Journal Article
Shape of Asteroid 4769 Castalia (1989 PB) from Inversion of Radar Images
1994
The inversion of previously reported, delay-Doppler images of Castalia yields a 167-parameter, three-dimensional shape model that is bifurcated into two distinct, irregular, kilometer-sized lobes. The crevice that separates the lobes has an average depth of between 100 and 150 meters and is oriented roughly perpendicular to the asteroid's longest dimension. The constrained least-squares reconstruction method introduced here can be used to determine the shape, spin vector, and radar-scattering properties of any asteroid or comet for which delay-Doppler images provide sufficient signal-to-noise ratio, orientational coverage, and spatial resolution.
Journal Article