Short-term variability of 10 trans-Neptunian objects
A. Thirouin, J. L. Ortiz, A. Campo Bagatin, P. Pravec, N. Morales, O., Hainaut, R. Duffard

TL;DR
This study investigates the short-term brightness variability of 10 trans-Neptunian objects over three years, revealing rotation periods, amplitudes, and physical properties, and confirming biases in existing observational data.
Contribution
First comprehensive analysis of short-term variability for a diverse sample of 10 TNOs, including rotation periods and amplitude measurements, with insights into observational biases.
Findings
Most TNOs have low amplitude light curves (<0.15mag).
Two objects exhibit higher amplitude light curves (>0.15mag).
Confirmed biases against detecting long periods and small amplitudes in TNO observations.
Abstract
We present our latest results about the short-term variability of trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs). We performed broad-band CCD photometric observations using several telescopes in Spain and Chile. We present results based on three years of observations and report the short-term variability of 10 TNOs. Our sample of studied targets contains classical objects: (275809) 2001 QY297, (307251) 2002 KW14, (55636) 2002 TX300, 2004 NT33, (230965) 2004 XA192, and (202421) 2005 UQ513, a resonant body: (84522) 2002 TC302, a scattered target: (44594) 1999 OX3, and two detached objects: (145480) 2005 TB190, and (40314) 1999 KR16. For each target, light curves as well as possible rotation periods and photometric amplitudes are reported. The majority of the observed objects present a low peak-to-peak amplitude, <0.15mag. Only two objects exhibit light curve amplitudes higher than 0.15mag: (275809) 2001…
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