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Characterisation of small, close-approaching near-earth asteroids

Near-Earth Asteroids (NEAs) are a population of asteroids in a steady state, constantly being replenished with asteroids from the main belt. NEAs have orbits that come close to or cross the Earth's orbit and therefore some could have impacting trajectories and pose a threat. Small NEAs (diameter < 3...

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Main Author: Janse van Rensburg, Petronella
Other Authors: Erasmus, Nicolas
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Astronomy 2021
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access_status_str Open Access
author Janse van Rensburg, Petronella
author2 Erasmus, Nicolas
author_browse Erasmus, Nicolas
Janse van Rensburg, Petronella
author_facet Erasmus, Nicolas
Janse van Rensburg, Petronella
author_sort Janse van Rensburg, Petronella
collection Thesis
description Near-Earth Asteroids (NEAs) are a population of asteroids in a steady state, constantly being replenished with asteroids from the main belt. NEAs have orbits that come close to or cross the Earth's orbit and therefore some could have impacting trajectories and pose a threat. Small NEAs (diameter < 300 m) pose a greater threat compared to large NEAs because they are more abundant and can cause significant damage on impact. The characteristics of small NEAs can give an indication of the most likely properties of potential future impactors. Even though in recent years the number of discovery and characterisation programmes of NEAs have increased, the characterisation of the small NEA population still lags behind because they can only be observed with 1-m class telescopes when they pass close to the Earth and become bright enough. Presented here in this MSc thesis are 20 NEAs that were successfully observed and characterised with the South African Astronomical Observatory (SAAO) 40-inch telescope and the Sutherland HighSpeed Optical Camera. Out of the 20 NEAs, 14 had diameters < 300 m (H > 21). Characterisation involved assigning taxonomic probabilities to each NEA based on spectra from the Bus-DeMeo classification scheme and thereby inferring its most probable composition, as well as using a Lomb-Scargle periodogram to extract the rotation period from multi-band photometry. The taxonomic probabilities were determined with the colours g0−r 0 and r0−i 0 , in combination with a machine learning (ML) algorithm trained on synthetic colours from observed spectra obtained from literature. The taxonomies considered were the S-, C-, and X-complexes, and the D-, Q-, and V-types. In this thesis, the taxonomic probabilities are reported for all of the targets. A distinct taxonomic class was assigned to 15 NEAs that had a probability >50% in a specific taxonomy. New taxonomic classes are reported for 11 of the targets. A notable result of this study is the confirmation of the prediction that the most common meteorite, ordinary chondrites, are due to S-complex and Q-type asteroids. The fraction of meteorite falls due to ordinary chondrites are similar to the combined fraction of Scomplex and Q-type asteroids in this study (∼80%). This confirmation was only possible by including the Q-type asteroids in the classification and being able to differentiate between the C-complex and Q-type asteroids with two colours and a ML approach. A rotation period was extracted for nine NEAs that were observed for long enough to resolve a light curve period. The remaining targets had only partial or flat light curves and no period could be resolved from the periodogram. Reported here are also three small NEAs with H > 22 magnitude which were found to have rotation periods smaller than the 2.2 hour spin barrier and could be rigid pieces of rock instead of rubble piles.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/33725 Characterisation of small, close-approaching near-earth asteroids Janse van Rensburg, Petronella Erasmus, Nicolas Bershady, Matthew A astronomy Near-Earth Asteroids (NEAs) are a population of asteroids in a steady state, constantly being replenished with asteroids from the main belt. NEAs have orbits that come close to or cross the Earth's orbit and therefore some could have impacting trajectories and pose a threat. Small NEAs (diameter < 300 m) pose a greater threat compared to large NEAs because they are more abundant and can cause significant damage on impact. The characteristics of small NEAs can give an indication of the most likely properties of potential future impactors. Even though in recent years the number of discovery and characterisation programmes of NEAs have increased, the characterisation of the small NEA population still lags behind because they can only be observed with 1-m class telescopes when they pass close to the Earth and become bright enough. Presented here in this MSc thesis are 20 NEAs that were successfully observed and characterised with the South African Astronomical Observatory (SAAO) 40-inch telescope and the Sutherland HighSpeed Optical Camera. Out of the 20 NEAs, 14 had diameters < 300 m (H > 21). Characterisation involved assigning taxonomic probabilities to each NEA based on spectra from the Bus-DeMeo classification scheme and thereby inferring its most probable composition, as well as using a Lomb-Scargle periodogram to extract the rotation period from multi-band photometry. The taxonomic probabilities were determined with the colours g0−r 0 and r0−i 0 , in combination with a machine learning (ML) algorithm trained on synthetic colours from observed spectra obtained from literature. The taxonomies considered were the S-, C-, and X-complexes, and the D-, Q-, and V-types. In this thesis, the taxonomic probabilities are reported for all of the targets. A distinct taxonomic class was assigned to 15 NEAs that had a probability >50% in a specific taxonomy. New taxonomic classes are reported for 11 of the targets. A notable result of this study is the confirmation of the prediction that the most common meteorite, ordinary chondrites, are due to S-complex and Q-type asteroids. The fraction of meteorite falls due to ordinary chondrites are similar to the combined fraction of Scomplex and Q-type asteroids in this study (∼80%). This confirmation was only possible by including the Q-type asteroids in the classification and being able to differentiate between the C-complex and Q-type asteroids with two colours and a ML approach. A rotation period was extracted for nine NEAs that were observed for long enough to resolve a light curve period. The remaining targets had only partial or flat light curves and no period could be resolved from the periodogram. Reported here are also three small NEAs with H > 22 magnitude which were found to have rotation periods smaller than the 2.2 hour spin barrier and could be rigid pieces of rock instead of rubble piles. 2021-08-06T11:07:55Z 2021-08-06T11:07:55Z 2021 2021-08-06T11:06:49Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33725 eng application/pdf Department of Astronomy Faculty of Science
spellingShingle astronomy
Janse van Rensburg, Petronella
Characterisation of small, close-approaching near-earth asteroids
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Characterisation of small, close-approaching near-earth asteroids
title_full Characterisation of small, close-approaching near-earth asteroids
title_fullStr Characterisation of small, close-approaching near-earth asteroids
title_full_unstemmed Characterisation of small, close-approaching near-earth asteroids
title_short Characterisation of small, close-approaching near-earth asteroids
title_sort characterisation of small close approaching near earth asteroids
topic astronomy
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33725
work_keys_str_mv AT jansevanrensburgpetronella characterisationofsmallcloseapproachingnearearthasteroids