Back to Search Start Over

Near-infrared colors of minor planets recovered from VISTA - VHS survey (MOVIS)

Authors :
Popescu, M.
Licandro, J.
Morate, D.
de Leon, J.
Nedelcu, D. A.
Rebolo, R.
McMahon, R. G.
Gonzalez-Solares, E.
Irwin, M.
Source :
A&A 591, A115 (2016)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) provide information about the surface composition of about 100,000 minor planets. The resulting visible colors and albedos enabled us to group them in several major classes, which are a simplified view of the diversity shown by the few existing spectra. We performed a serendipitous search in VISTA-VHS observations using a pipeline developed to retrieve and process the data that corresponds to solar system objects (SSo). The colors and the magnitudes of the minor planets observed by the VISTA survey are compiled into three catalogs that are available online: the detections catalog (MOVIS-D), the magnitudes catalog (MOVIS-M), and the colors catalog (MOVIS-C). They were built using the third data release of the survey (VISTA VHS-DR3). A total of 39,947 objects were detected, including 52 NEAs, 325 Mars Crossers, 515 Hungaria asteroids, 38,428 main-belt asteroids, 146 Cybele asteroids, 147 Hilda asteroids, 270 Trojans, 13 comets, 12 Kuiper Belt objects and Neptune with its four satellites. The colors found for asteroids with known spectral properties reveal well-defined patterns corresponding to different mineralogies. The distributions of MOVIS-C data in color-color plots shows clusters identified with different taxonomic types. All the diagrams that use (Y-J) color separate the spectral classes more effectively than the (J-H) and (H-Ks) plots used until now: even for large color errors (<0.1), the plots (Y-J) vs (Y-Ks) and (Y-J) vs (J-Ks) provide the separation between S-complex and C-complex. The end members A, D, R, and V-types occupy well-defined regions.<br />Comment: 19 pages, 16 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
A&A 591, A115 (2016)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1605.05594
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201628163