Nereid: Light Curve for 1999-2006 and a Scenario for its Variations
Bradley E. Schaefer, Suzanne W. Tourtellotte, David L. Rabinowitz, and, Martha W. Schaefer

TL;DR
This study provides a comprehensive 20-year photometric analysis of Nereid, revealing diverse brightness behaviors and proposing a precession-based model to explain its variability, which is unique among small icy bodies.
Contribution
It offers the most extensive dataset for Nereid, characterizes its variable light curves over years, and introduces a novel precession scenario to explain the observed brightness changes.
Findings
Nereid exhibits diverse brightness behaviors across years.
The phase curve fits a Hapke model for opposition surge.
Year-to-year variability is likely due to forced precession.
Abstract
Nereid is a small irregular moon of Neptune that displays large-, moderate-, and small-amplitude photometric variations on both fast and slow time scales. The central mystery of Nereid is now to explain the physical mechanism of these unique brightness changes and why they change with time. To characterize Nereid's variability, we have been using the SMARTS telescopes on Cerro Tololo for synoptic monitoring from 1999 to 2006. We present a well-sampled photometric time series of 493 magnitudes on 246 nights mostly in the V-band. In combination with our earlier data (for 774 magnitudes over 362 nights), our 20-year data set is the most comprehensive for any small icy body in our Solar System. Our yearly light curves show that Nereid displays various types of behaviors: large amplitude brightenings and fadings (1987 to 1990); moderate-amplitude variation about the average phase curve…
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