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Initial Performance of the NEOWISE Reactivation Mission

Authors :
Martha Kendall
Peter Eisenhardt
Tommy Grav
Christopher R. Gelino
Lin Yan
Tim Conrow
A. K. Mainzer
David B. Thompson
P. Sevilla
H. McCallon
M. Wittman
J. Davy Kirkpatrick
B. Fabinsky
M. Papin
I. Heinrichsen
C. R. Nugent
S. Wheelock
James M. Bauer
Edward L. Wright
Frank J. Masci
Sarah Sonnett
Fengchuan Liu
Joseph Masiero
P. Clarkson
D. Royer
Carl J. Grillmair
Rachel Stevenson
T. Ryan
Emily L. Rice
Ron Beck
John W. Fowler
Sergio Fajardo-Acosta
D. Wiemer
Roc M. Cutri
John W. Dailey
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
arXiv, 2014.

Abstract

NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) spacecraft has been brought out of hibernation and has resumed surveying the sky at 3.4 and 4.6 um. The scientific objectives of the NEOWISE reactivation mission are to detect, track, and characterize near-Earth asteroids and comets. The search for minor planets resumed on December 23, 2013, and the first new near-Earth object (NEO) was discovered six days later. As an infrared survey, NEOWISE detects asteroids based on their thermal emission and is equally sensitive to high and low albedo objects; consequently, NEOWISE-discovered NEOs tend to be large and dark. Over the course of its three-year mission, NEOWISE will determine radiometrically-derived diameters and albedos for approximately 2000 NEOs and tens of thousands of Main Belt asteroids. The 32 months of hibernation have had no significant effect on the mission's performance. Image quality, sensitivity, photometric and astrometric accuracy, completeness, and the rate of minor planet detections are all essentially unchanged from the prime mission's post-cryogenic phase.<br />Comment: ApJ accepted

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7269b841ff39d1fea8501fc4962f3b18
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1406.6025