Back to Search Start Over

The Lightcurve of 4179 Toutatis: Evidence for Complex Rotation

Authors :
Valerij S. Shevchenko
Tomas Hudecek
Jean Lecacheux
Carol Neese
M. Antonietta Barucci
Leonid A. Akimov
Tsuko Nakamura
Vasilij G. Chiornij
Paolo Angelini
J.W. Young
O.B. Ezhkova
F. P. Velichko
C. A. Angeli
Claudia Venditti
Danilo Riccioli
François Colas
Peter Dentchev
Marcello Fulchignoni
Beatrice E. A. Mueller
Z.B. Korobova
Marc W. Buie
N. I. Koshkin
Peter V. Birch
Vasilij G. Shevchenko
Daniela Lazzaro
Michael C. Nolan
Elisabetta Dotto
S. Yu. Mel'Nikov
C. Blanco
Anna Caruso
Ben Zellner
Valdimir P. Kozhevnikov
M.Cristina De Sanctis
Nikolay Dorokhov
John R. Spencer
Roberta Venditti
Wayne Osborn
Alan W. Harris
Wieslaw Z. Wisniewski
Tadeusz Michalowski
Simon F. Green
Yurij N. Krugly
Ellen S. Howell
Petr Pravec
Valerij V. Kobelev
David J. Tholen
Alexander V. Kalashnikov
Jack MacConnell
Source :
Icarus. 117:71-89
Publication Year :
1995
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 1995.

Abstract

The Apollo asteroid 4179 Toutatis passed within 0.0242 AU of Earth in December 1992, and photometry was obtained by observers from at least 25 sites around the world, at solar phase angles between 121° and 0.2°. The phase curve is well described in the H, G system with a mean H of 15.3 and a slope parameter G of 0.10 ± 0.10. However, the rotational lightcurve is very unusual. The amplitude is large (1.2 magnitudes) and the rotation period is extremely long (several days). Most remarkably, the lightcurve does not appear to be periodic: it is unlikely that a single rotation period can account for the lightcurve even when the rapidly changing viewing and illumination geometry during the close Earth approach is taken into account, though strong lightcurve minima recurred approximately every 7.3 days. The likely explanation is that Toutatis has complex, tumbling, rotation with a characteristic period between 3 and 7 days. As noted by A. W. Harris (1994 Icarus 107, 209-211), the damping time scale from complex to simple rotation for a small, slowly rotating asteroid like Toutatis is so long that complex rotation is expected, but Toutatis is the first asteroid to show such strong observational evidence for complex rotation.

Details

ISSN :
00191035
Volume :
117
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Icarus
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........3c3fa7b9077cbb5939e85f40014e03b2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1006/icar.1995.1143