Photometric Observations and Modeling of Asteroid 1620 Geographos

Magnusson, P.; Dahlgren, M.; Barucci, M. A.; Jorda, L.; Binzel, R. P.; Slivan, S. M.; Blanco, C.; Riccioli, D.; Buratti, B. J.; Colas, F.; Berthier, J.; de Angelis, G.; di Martino, M.; Dotto, E.; Drummond, J. D.; Fink, U.; Hicks, M.; Grundy, W.; Wisniewski, W.; Gaftonyuk, N. M.; Geyer, E. H.; Bauer, T.; Hoffmann, M.; Ivanova, V.; Komitov, B.; Donchev, Z.; Denchev, P.; Krugly, Yu. N.; Velichko, F. P.; Chiorny, V. G.; Lupishko, D. F.; Shevchenko, V. G.; Kwiatkowski, T.; Kryszczynska, A.; Lahulla, J. F.; Licandro, J.; Mendez, O.; Mottola, S.; Erikson, A.; Ostro, S. J.; Pravec, P.; Pych, W.; Tholen, D. J.; Whiteley, R.; Wild, W. J.; Wolf, M.; Sarounova, L.
Referencia bibliográfica

Icarus, Volume 123, Issue 1, pp. 227-244.

Fecha de publicación:
9
1996
Revista
Número de autores
47
Número de autores del IAC
0
Número de citas
23
Número de citas referidas
22
Descripción
Photometric observations of 1620 Geographos in 1993 and 1994 are presented and, in combination with previously published data, are used to derive models of Geographos. We estimate that the sidereal period of rotation is 0.21763860 +/- 0.00000003 days (5^h13^m23.975^s +/- 0.003^s). The sense of rotation is retrograde. The ecliptic coordinates of the spin angular velocity vector are estimated to lambda_p = 56 deg +/- 6 deg and beta_p = -47 deg +/- 4 deg (equinox J2000.0). The lightcurve amplitudes are well-explained by an ellipsoidal model with axis ratios a/b = 2.58 +/- 0.16 and b/c = 1.00 +/- 0.15. Models that have one or both ends more sharply pointed than the ellipsoid improve the fit to the observations. There are no significant indications of albedo variegation, but non-geometric scattering effects are tentatively suggested based on significant rotational color variation.