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Post Info TOPIC: Asteroid occultations


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RE: Asteroid occultations
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Why Occultations?

Ned Smith explains that when an asteroid is expected to occlude a star, he and fellow IOTA members all over the world are notified of the projected time and location, and all sit awaiting it eagerly with their telescopes, GPS systems and specialised computer programs at the ready.
If all goes well, one observer at Point A may track a 5-second occultation, one at Point B a 14-second occultation, one at Point C zilch. They all record their findings and submit them to an astronomy institute where the data is compiled to get a composite picture of the size and shape of the asteroid.

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Title: Asteroid occultations today and tomorrow: toward the GAIA era
Authors: P. Tanga (OCA), M. Delbo (OCA, Inaf-Osservatorio Astronomico Di Torino)

Context: Observation of star occultations is a powerful tool to determine shapes and sizes of asteroids. This is key information necessary for studying the evolution of the asteroid belt and to calibrate indirect methods of size determination, such as the models used to analyse thermal infrared observations. Up to now, the observation of asteroid occultations is an activity essentially secured by amateur astronomers equipped with small, portable equipments. However, the accuracy of the available ephemeris prevents accurate predictions of the occultation events for objects smaller than ~100 km. Aims: We investigate current limits in predictability and observability of asteroid occultations, and we study their possible evolution in the future, when high accuracy asteroid orbits and star positions (such as those expected from the mission Gaia of the European Space Agency) will be available. Methods: We use a simple model for asteroid ephemeris uncertainties and numerical algorithms for estimating the limits imposed by the instruments, assuming realistic CCD performances and asteroid size distribution, to estimate the expected occultation rate under different conditions. Results: We show that high accuracy ephemerides which will be available in the future will extend toward much smaller asteroids the possibility of observing asteroid occultations, greatly increasing the number of events and objects involved. A complete set of size measurements down to ~10 km main belt asteroids could be obtained in a few years, provided that a small network of ground-based 1m telescopes are devoted to occultation studies.

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