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  • ASTRONOMY  (3)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: This report documents the program and data used to identify known asteroids observed by the Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) and to compute albedos and diameters from their IRAS fluxes. It also presents listings of the results obtained. These results supplant those in the IRAS Asteroid and Comet Survey, 1986. The present version used new and improved asteroid orbital elements for 4679 numbered asteroids and 2632 additional asteroids for which at least two-opposition elements were available as of mid-1991. It employed asteroid absolute magnitudes on the International Astronomical Union system adopted in 1991. In addition, the code was modified to increase the reliability of associating asteroids with IRAS sources and rectify several shortcomings in the final data products released in 1986. Association reliability was improved by decreasing the position difference between an IRAS source and a predicted asteroid position required for an association. The shortcomings addressed included the problem of flux overestimation for low SNR sources and the systematic difference in albedos and diameters among the three wavelength bands (12, 25, and 60 micrometers). Several minor bugs in the original code were also corrected.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: AD-A276726 , PL-TR-92-2049
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Observations made by the Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) during 1983 constitute the largest, most complete, and least biased of the asteroid surveys to date. A total of 1811 asteroids and 25 comets with known orbits were measured. Thermal flux densities at 12, 25, 60, and 100 microns, as well as (in the case of asteroids) their derived radiometric albedos and diameters have been compiled in the IRAS Asteroid and Comet Survey. Useful low-resolution spectra were obtained for 47 numbered asteroids. There is evidence in the IRAS data base for a large population of asteroids with unknown orbits. The methods of observation are outlined. The survey strategy and the data reduction are discussed. The rationale is given for the various IRAS asteroid and comet data products. Some directions for future research using IRAS data are suggested.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: Asteroids II; Mar 08, 1988 - Mar 11, 1988; Tucson, AZ; United States
    Format: text
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: We report the following results from a decade of infrared radiometry of Io: (1) The average global heat flow is more than approx. 2.5 W/sq.m, (2) large warm (less than or equal to 200 K) volcanic regions dominate the global heat flow, (3) smal high-temperature (greater than or = 300 K) 'hotspots' contribute little to the average heat flow, (4) thermal anomalies on the leading hemisphere contribute about half of the heat flow, (5) a substantial amount of heat is radiated during Io's night, (6) high-temperature (greater than or = 600 K) 'outbursts' occurred during approx. 4% of the nights we observed, (7) 'Loki' is the brightest, persistent, infrared emission feature, and (8) some excess emission is always present at the longitude of Loki, but its intensity and other characteristics change between apparitions. Observations of Io at M(4.8 micrometer), 8.7 micrometer, N(10 micrometer), and Q(20 micrometer) with the Infrared Telescope Facility presented here were collected during nine apparitions between 1983 and 1993. These measurements provide full longitudinal coveraged as well as an eclipse observation and the detection of two outbursts. Reflected sunlight, passive thermal emission, and radiation from thermal anomalies all contribute to the observed flux densities. We find that a new thermophysical model is required to match all the data. Two key elements of this model are (1) a 'thermal reservoir' unit which lowers daytime temperatures, and (2) the 'thermal pedestal effect' which shifts to shorter wavelengths the spectral emission due to the reradiation of solar energy absorbed by the thermal anomalies. The thermal anomalies are modeled with a total of 10 source components at five locations. Io's heat flow is the sum of the power from these components.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 99; E8; p. 17095-17162
    Format: text
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