Distant asteroids and ChironKnowledge of the physical properties of distant asteroids (a greater than 3.3 AU) has grown dramatically over the past five years, due to systematic compositional and lighcurve studies. Most of these objects have red, dark surfaces, and their spectra show a reddening in spectral slope with heliocentric distance, implying a change in surface composition. Trojans for which near-opposition phase curve information is available appear to show little or no opposition effect, unlike any other dark solar system objects. The lightcurve amplitudes of Trojan and Hilda asteroids imply significantly more elongated shapes for these groups than for main-belt asteroids of comparable size. These recent observations are reviewed in the context of their implications for the formationan and subsequent evolution of the distant asteroids, and their interrelations with the main belt, Chiron, and comets.
Document ID
19900039970
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
French, Linda M. (USAF, Geophysics Laboratory, Hanscom AFB MA, United States)
Vilas, Faith (NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Hartmann, William K. (Planetary Science Institute Tucson, AZ, United States)
Tholen, David J. (Hawaii, University Honolulu, United States)