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A Deep and Wide Twilight Survey for Asteroids Interior to Earth and Venus

Authors :
Scott S. Sheppard
David J. Tholen
Petr Pokorny
Marco Micheli
Ian Dell’Antonio
Shenming Fu
Chadwick A. Trujillo
Rachael Beaton
Scott Carlsten
Alex Drlica-Wagner
Clara Martínez-Vázquez
Sidney Mau
Toni Santana-Ros
Luidhy Santana-Silva
Cristóbal Sifón
Sunil Simha
Audrey Thirouin
David Trilling
A. Katherina Vivas
Alfredo Zenteno
Source :
The Astronomical Journal. 164(168)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2022.

Abstract

We are conducting a survey using twilight time on the Dark Energy Camera with the Blanco 4 m telescope in Chile to look for objects interior to Earth's and Venus' orbits. To date we have discovered two rare Atira/Apohele asteroids, 2021 LJ4 and 2021 PH27, which have orbits completely interior to Earth's orbit. We also discovered one new Apollo-type Near Earth Object (NEO) that crosses Earth's orbit, 2022 AP7. Two of the discoveries have diameters ≳1 km. 2022 AP7 is likely the largest Potentially Hazardous Asteroid (PHA) discovered in about eight years. To date we have covered 624 square degrees of sky near to and interior to the orbit of Venus. The average images go to 21.3 mag in the *r* band, with the best images near 22nd mag. Our new discovery 2021 PH27 has the smallest semimajor axis known for an asteroid, 0.4617 au, and the largest general relativistic effects (53 arcsec/century) known for any body in the solar system. The survey has detected ∼15% of all known Atira NEOs. We put strong constraints on any stable population of Venus co-orbital resonance objects existing, as well as the Atira and Vatira asteroid classes. These interior asteroid populations are important to complete the census of asteroids near Earth, including some of the most likely Earth impactors that cannot easily be discovered in other surveys. Comparing the actual population of asteroids found interior to Earth and Venus with those predicted to exist by extrapolating from the known population exterior to Earth is important to better understand the origin, composition, and structure of the NEO population.

Subjects

Subjects :
Astronomy

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
164
Issue :
168
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
The Astronomical Journal
Notes :
462814134, , 80NSSC21K0807, , 80GSFC21M0002, , 80NSSC21K0153, , CEX2019-000918-M, , RTI2018-095076-B-C21
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20230003802
Document Type :
Report
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ac8cff