Observational and Dynamical Characterization of Main-Belt Comet P/2010 R2 (La Sagra)
Henry H. Hsieh, Bin Yang, Nader Haghighipour, Bojan Novakovic, Robert, Jedicke, Richard J. Wainscoat, Larry Denneau, Shinsuke Abe, Wen-Ping Chen,, Alan Fitzsimmons, Mikael Granvik, Tommy Grav, Wing Ip, Heather M. Kaluna,, Daisuke Kinoshita, Jan Kleyna, Matthew M. Knight

TL;DR
This study characterizes the main-belt comet P/2010 R2 (La Sagra) through multi-telescope observations, revealing ongoing dust activity likely driven by sublimation, and confirms its dynamical stability within the asteroid belt.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed observational and dynamical analysis of P/La Sagra, establishing its cometary activity and likely native origin in the main belt.
Findings
Observed dust tail and trail indicating ongoing activity
No gas emission detected, upper limit on sublimation products
Dynamically stable for over 100 million years
Abstract
We present observations of comet-like main-belt object P/2010 R2 (La Sagra) obtained by Pan-STARRS 1 and the Faulkes Telescope-North on Haleakala in Hawaii, the University of Hawaii 2.2 m, Gemini-North, and Keck I telescopes on Mauna Kea, the Danish 1.54 m telescope at La Silla, and the Isaac Newton Telescope on La Palma. An antisolar dust tail is observed from August 2010 through February 2011, while a dust trail aligned with the object's orbit plane is also observed from December 2010 through August 2011. Assuming typical phase darkening behavior, P/La Sagra is seen to increase in brightness by >1 mag between August 2010 and December 2010, suggesting that dust production is ongoing over this period. These results strongly suggest that the observed activity is cometary in nature (i.e., driven by the sublimation of volatile material), and that P/La Sagra is therefore the most recent…
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