A physical model is presented to explain the existence of a class of large-lightcurve-amplitude, rapidly rotating asteroids found most commonly among objects in the size range 100-300 km diameter. A significant correlation between rotation period and lightcurve amplitude exists for asteroids in this size range in the sense that those with larger amplitudes spin more rapidly and hence these objects have high rotational angular momenta. Since this is a property of Jacobi ellipsoids, the question of whether these asteroids might be examples of triaxial equilibrium ellipsoids has been investigated. It is found that objects rotating with periods of 6 hr must have densities between 1.1 and 1.4 g/cu cm, while those rotating in 4 hr would have dens...
We present models of the shapes of four Kuiper Belt objects (KBOs) and the Jovian Trojan asteroid (6...
International audienceSince their formation, asteroids since their formation have experienced little...
Context. Thanks to various space missions and the progress of ground-based observational t...
International audienceThe original idea of Farinella et al. [1] that rubble pile asteroids can have ...
A way is described to find the initial conditions for the simplest three-dimensional periodic motio...
The large main belt asteroids (MBA) have been formed during an accretion process where their origin...
Abstract Research about asteroids has recently attracted more and more attention, especially focusin...
Aims. A recent major high-angular-resolution imaging survey of 42 large main-belt asteroids (D > 100...
The rotations of asteroids larger than ~40 km in diameter have a distribution close to Max-wellian t...
The dynamical environment on the surface of a rotating, massive ellipsoid is studied, with applicati...
Many asteroids are known to be non-spherical, as revealed by changes in their brightness as they rot...
A triaxial-ellipsoid model is used to simulate the smooth and nearly symmetric light curves that are...
Three aspects of the rotational history of the minor planets are considered - taxonomy, mathematical...
Copyright ESO. The original version is available at www.aanda.org.International audienceThe larger n...
We acquired dense rotational lightcurves for the taxonomic A-class asteroid 446 Aeternitas during th...
We present models of the shapes of four Kuiper Belt objects (KBOs) and the Jovian Trojan asteroid (6...
International audienceSince their formation, asteroids since their formation have experienced little...
Context. Thanks to various space missions and the progress of ground-based observational t...
International audienceThe original idea of Farinella et al. [1] that rubble pile asteroids can have ...
A way is described to find the initial conditions for the simplest three-dimensional periodic motio...
The large main belt asteroids (MBA) have been formed during an accretion process where their origin...
Abstract Research about asteroids has recently attracted more and more attention, especially focusin...
Aims. A recent major high-angular-resolution imaging survey of 42 large main-belt asteroids (D > 100...
The rotations of asteroids larger than ~40 km in diameter have a distribution close to Max-wellian t...
The dynamical environment on the surface of a rotating, massive ellipsoid is studied, with applicati...
Many asteroids are known to be non-spherical, as revealed by changes in their brightness as they rot...
A triaxial-ellipsoid model is used to simulate the smooth and nearly symmetric light curves that are...
Three aspects of the rotational history of the minor planets are considered - taxonomy, mathematical...
Copyright ESO. The original version is available at www.aanda.org.International audienceThe larger n...
We acquired dense rotational lightcurves for the taxonomic A-class asteroid 446 Aeternitas during th...
We present models of the shapes of four Kuiper Belt objects (KBOs) and the Jovian Trojan asteroid (6...
International audienceSince their formation, asteroids since their formation have experienced little...
Context. Thanks to various space missions and the progress of ground-based observational t...