The triaxial ellipsoid dimensions, rotational pole, and bulk density of ESA Rosetta target asteroid (21) Lutetia
J. D. Drummond, A. Conrad, W. J. Merline, B. Carry, C. R. Chapman, H., A. Weaver, P. M. Tamblyn, J. C. Christou, and C. Dumas

TL;DR
This study estimates the size, shape, spin axis, and bulk density of asteroid (21) Lutetia using adaptive optics images, revealing significant deviations from an ideal ellipsoid and suggesting a likely enstatite-chondrite composition.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed triaxial ellipsoid model of Lutetia combining AO imaging and mass data, improving size and density estimates and analyzing shape deviations.
Findings
Lutetia's dimensions are approximately 124 x 101 x 93 km.
The asteroid's bulk density is estimated at 3.5-4.3 g/cm³.
Significant departures from a perfect ellipsoid are observed.
Abstract
We seek the best size estimates of the asteroid (21) Lutetia, the direction of its spin axis, and its bulk density, assuming its shape is well described by a smooth featureless triaxial ellipsoid, and to evaluate the deviations from this assumption. Methods. We derive these quantities from the outlines of the asteroid in 307 images of its resolved apparent disk obtained with adaptive optics (AO) at Keck II and VLT, and combine these with recent mass determinations to estimate a bulk density. Our best triaxial ellipsoid diameters for Lutetia, based on our AO images alone, are a x b x c = 132 x 101 x 93 km, with uncertainties of 4 x 3 x 13 km including estimated systematics, with a rotational pole within 5 deg. of ECJ2000 [long,lat] = [45, -7], or EQJ2000 [RA, DEC] = [44, +9]. The AO model fit itself has internal precisions of 1 x 1 x 8 km, but it is evident, both from this model derived…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
