Uninterrupted optical light curves of main-belt asteroids from the K2 Mission
R. Szab\'o, A. P\'al, K. S\'arneczky, Gy. M. Szab\'o, L. Moln\'ar, L., L. Kiss, O. Hanyecz, E. Plachy, Cs. Kiss

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the K2 space telescope can produce continuous, high-precision optical light curves of main-belt asteroids, enabling the determination of their rotational periods, including for faint objects, over several days.
Contribution
It is the first to derive quasi-continuous light curves of main-belt asteroids from K2 data, revealing rotational periods for 26 asteroids and assessing observational sensitivity.
Findings
Derived light curves for 1020 asteroids, including 26 with new rotational periods.
K2 can detect longer rotational periods than ground-based surveys.
High asteroid faintness and star density affect periodicity detection rates.
Abstract
Due to the failure of the second reaction wheel, a new mission was conceived for the otherwise healthy Kepler space telescope. In the course of the K2 Mission, the telescope is staring at the plane of the Ecliptic, hence thousands of Solar System bodies cross the K2 fields, usually causing extra noise in the highly accurate photometric data. In this paper we follow the someone's noise is another one's signal principle and investigate the possibility of deriving continuous asteroid light curves, that has been unprecedented to date. In general, we are interested in the photometric precision that the K2 Mission can deliver on moving Solar System bodies. In particular, we investigate space photometric optical light curves of main-belt asteroids. We study the K2 superstamps covering the M35 and Neptune/Nereid fields observed in the long cadence (29.4-min sampling) mode. Asteroid light curves…
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