Analysis of the rotation period of asteroids (1865) Cerberus, (2100) Ra-Shalom, and (3103) Eger - search for the YORP effect
J. Durech, D. Vokrouhlicky, A. R. Baransky, S. Breiter, O. A., Burkhonov, W. Cooney, V. Fuller, N. M. Gaftonyuk, J. Gross, R. Ya., Inasaridze, M. Kaasalainen, Yu. N. Krugly, O. I. Kvaratshelia, E. A., Litvinenko, B. Macomber, F. Marchis, I. E. Molotov, J. Oey, D. Polishook, J.

TL;DR
This study analyzed photometric data of three near-Earth asteroids to detect the YORP effect, finding probable rotation acceleration in Eger and no significant changes in Cerberus and Ra-Shalom.
Contribution
It presents new shape and spin models for three asteroids and provides observational constraints on the YORP effect, including a probable detection for Eger.
Findings
Probable detection of YORP-induced rotation acceleration in Eger
No significant YORP effect detected for Cerberus and Ra-Shalom
Derived physical models, including a nonconvex shape for Eger
Abstract
The spin state of small asteroids can change on a long timescale by the Yarkovsky-O'Keefe-Radzievskii-Paddack (YORP) effect, the net torque that arises from anisotropically scattered sunlight and proper thermal radiation from an irregularly-shaped asteroid. The secular change in the rotation period caused by the YORP effect can be detected by analysis of asteroid photometric lightcurves. We analyzed photometric lightcurves of near-Earth asteroids (1865) Cerberus, (2100) Ra-Shalom, and (3103) Eger with the aim to detect possible deviations from the constant rotation caused by the YORP effect. We carried out new photometric observations of the three asteroids, combined the new lightcurves with archived data, and used the lightcurve inversion method to model the asteroid shape, pole direction, and rotation rate. The YORP effect was modeled as a linear change in the rotation rate in time…
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