The Physical Characterization of the Potentially-Hazardous Asteroid 2004 BL86: A Fragment of a Differentiated Asteroid
Vishnu Reddy, Bruce L. Gary, Juan A. Sanchez, Driss Takir, Cristina A., Thomas, Paul S. Hardersen, Yenal Ogmen, Paul Benni, Thomas G. Kaye, Joao, Gregorio, Joe Garlitz, David Polishook, Lucille Le Corre, Andreas Nathues

TL;DR
This study provides a comprehensive physical characterization of asteroid 2004 BL86, including its binary nature, size, surface properties, and spectral composition, aiding impact risk assessment and understanding of its origin.
Contribution
It offers new detailed measurements of 2004 BL86's size, binary structure, phase curve, and spectral properties, enhancing knowledge of potentially hazardous asteroids.
Findings
2004 BL86 is a binary asteroid with a primary diameter of about 300 meters.
The asteroid's spectral properties suggest it is similar to non-cumulate eucrite meteorites.
The geometric albedo of 2004 BL86 is approximately 40%.
Abstract
The physical characterization of potentially hazardous asteroids (PHAs) is important for impact hazard assessment and evaluating mitigation options. Close flybys of PHAs provide an opportunity to study their surface photometric and spectral properties that enable identification of their source regions in the main asteroid belt. We observed PHA (357439) 2004 BL86 during a close flyby of the Earth at a distance of 1.2 million km (0.0080 AU) on January 26, 2015, with an array of ground-based telescopes to constrain its photometric and spectral properties. Lightcurve observations showed that the asteroid was a binary and subsequent radar observations confirmed the binary nature and gave a primary diameter of 300 meters and a secondary diameter of 50-100 meters. Our photometric observations were used to derive the phase curve of 2004 BL86 in the V-band. Two different photometric functions…
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