Extreme Sensitivity of the YORP Effect to Small-Scale Topography
Thomas S. Statler

TL;DR
The paper demonstrates that small-scale surface features on small celestial bodies cause extreme variability in YORP torque predictions, significantly impacting their spin evolution and stability.
Contribution
It quantifies how small topographical features induce large errors in YORP torque calculations, highlighting the importance of unresolved surface details.
Findings
Gaussian surface fluctuations cause ~100% errors in YORP predictions.
Crater-sized features induce errors of several tens of percent.
Boulders can alter YORP torque magnitude and sign dramatically.
Abstract
Radiation recoil (YORP) torques are shown to be extremely sensitive to small-scale surface topography. Starting from simulated objects representative of the near-Earth object population, random realizations of three types of small-scale topography are added: Gaussian surface fluctuations, craters, and boulders. For each, the resulting expected relative errors in the spin and obliquity components of the YORP torque are computed. Gaussian power produces errors of order 100% if observations constrain the surface to a spherical harmonic order l < 10. A single crater with diameter roughly half the object's mean radius, placed at random locations, results in errors of several tens of percent. Boulders create torque errors roughly 3 times larger than do craters of the same diameter. A single boulder comparable to Yoshinodai on 25143 Itokawa, moved by as little as twice its own diameter, can…
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