Photometry of Centaurs and trans-Neptunian objects: 2060 Chiron (1977 UB), 10199 Chariklo (1997 CU26), 38628 Huya (2000 EB173), 28978 Ixion (2001 KX76), and 90482 Orcus (2004 DW)
Mattia Galiazzo, Carlos de la Fuente Marcos, Raul de la Fuente Marcos,, Giovanni Carraro, Michele Maris, Marco Montalto

TL;DR
This study presents precise photometric observations of five outer Solar System minor bodies, determining their rotation periods, colours, and searching for signs of activity or companions, thereby enhancing understanding of their physical properties.
Contribution
The paper provides new, high-precision photometric data for five Centaurs and TNOs, including their rotation periods and colours, with no evidence of activity or binary companions, improving physical characterization of these objects.
Findings
Rotation periods determined for all five objects.
Colours of Centaurs and Huya measured accurately.
No signs of activity or binary companions found.
Abstract
Both Centaurs and trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) are minor bodies found in the outer Solar System. Centaurs are a transient population that moves between the orbits of Jupiter and Neptune, and they probably diffused out of the TNOs. TNOs move mainly beyond Neptune. Some of these objects display episodic cometary behaviour; a few percent of them are known to host binary companions. Here, we study the light-curves of two Centaurs -2060 Chiron (1977 UB) and 10199 Chariklo (1997 CU26)- and three TNOs -38628 Huya (2000 EB173), 28978 Ixion (2001 KX76), and 90482 Orcus (2004 DW)- and the colours of the Centaurs and Huya. Precise, ~1%, R-band absolute CCD photometry of these minor bodies acquired between 2006 and 2011 is presented; the new data are used to investigate the rotation rate of these objects. The colours of the Centaurs and Huya are determined using BVRI photometry. The point spread…
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