Reanalyzing the visible colors of Centaurs and KBOs: what is there and what we might be missing
Nuno Peixinho, Audrey Delsanti, Alain Doressoundiram

TL;DR
This study reexamines visible color data of Centaurs and KBOs, highlighting how data errors, sampling size, and filter choices influence the detection of correlations and surface property insights.
Contribution
It introduces methods to account for data errors, sampling limitations, and filter sensitivities in analyzing color correlations of Centaurs and KBOs, providing a more robust understanding.
Findings
Data error bars limit detectable correlations.
Larger samples needed for strong correlation detection.
Classical KBOs show no significant color correlations.
Abstract
Visible colors (BVRI) are a reasonable proxy for real spectra of Centaurs and Kuiper Belt Objects, which are rather linear in this range. Colors provide limited information but remain the best tool to study the bulk surface properties. We explore recurrent effects in the study of visible colors: i) how a correlation could be missed or weakened as a result of the data error bars, ii) the "risk" of missing an existing trend because of low sampling, and the possibility of making quantified predictions on the sample size needed to detect a trend at a given significance level, iii) the use of partial correlations to distinguish the mutual effect of two or more parameters, and iv) the sensitivity of the "reddening line" tool to the central wavelength of the filters used. We have compiled the visible colors of about 370 objects available in the literature and carried out an analysis per…
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