(1173) Anchises - Thermophysical and Dynamical Studies of a Dynamically Unstable Jovian Trojan
J. Horner, T. G. M\"uller, P. S. Lykawka

TL;DR
This study combines thermophysical and dynamical modeling of Jovian Trojan (1173) Anchises, revealing its unusual elongated shape, high thermal inertia, retrograde rotation, and dynamical instability, suggesting a complex origin and evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence of a dynamically unstable Jovian Trojan and links thermophysical properties with orbital stability, offering new insights into Trojan origins.
Findings
Anchises is an elongated body with axes ratio ~1.4.
It has a high thermal inertia of 25-100 Jm-2s-0.5K-1.
Anchises' orbit is dynamically unstable on hundreds of Myr timescales.
Abstract
We have performed detailed thermophysical and dynamical modelling of Jovian Trojan (1173) Anchises. Our results reveal a most unusual object. By examining observational data taken by IRAS, Akari and WISE between 11.5 and 60 microns, along with variations in its optical lightcurve, we find Anchises is most likely an elongated body, with an axes-ratio of ~1.4. This yields calculated best-fit dimensions of 170x121x121km (an equivalent diameter of 136+18/-11km). We find the observations are best fit by Anchises having a retrograde sense of rotation, and an unusually high thermal inertia (25 to 100 Jm-2s-0.5K-1). The geometric albedo is found to be 0.027 (+0.006/-0.007). Anchises therefore has one of the highest published thermal inertias of any object larger than 100km in diameter, at such large heliocentric distances, and is one of the lowest albedo objects ever observed. More observations…
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