Possible ring material around centaur (2060) Chiron
J.L. Ortiz, R. Duffard, N. Pinilla-Alonso, A. Alvarez-Candal, P., Santos-Sanz, N. Morales, E. Fern\'andez-Valenzuela, J. Licandro, A. Campo, Bagatin, A. Thirouin

TL;DR
This paper suggests that rings around centaur (2060) Chiron explain observed occultation events, brightness variations, and spectral features, proposing a ring system as a common feature among centaurs with implications for their color distribution.
Contribution
It introduces the first evidence for rings around Chiron, determines possible ring orientations, and links ring tilt to brightness and spectral variability, suggesting rings are common in centaurs.
Findings
Two possible ring pole orientations identified.
Chiron's brightness variations explained by ring tilt changes.
Spectral water ice features linked to icy ring system.
Abstract
We propose that several short duration events observed in past stellar occultations by Chiron were produced by rings material. From a reanalysis of the stellar occultation data in the literature we determined two possible orientations of the pole of Chiron's rings, with ecliptic coordinates l=(352+/-10) deg, b=(37+/-10) deg or l=(144+/-10) deg, b=(24+/-10) deg . The mean radius of the rings is (324 +/- 10) km. One can use the rotational lightcurve amplitude of Chiron at different epochs to distinguish between the two solutions for the pole. Both imply lower lightcurve amplitude in 2013 than in 1988, when the rotational lightcurve was first determined. We derived Chiron's rotational lightcurve in 2013 from observations at the 1.23-m CAHA telescope and indeed its amplitude is smaller than in 1988. We also present a rotational lightcurve in 2000 from images taken at CASLEO 2.15-m telescope…
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