TNOs are Cool: a survey of the Transneptunian Region XII. Thermal light curves of Haumea, 2003 VS2 and 2003 AZ84 with Herschel Space Observatory-PACS
P. Santos-Sanz (1), E. Lellouch (2), O. Groussin (3), P. Lacerda (4),, T.G. Mueller (5), J.L. Ortiz (1), C. Kiss (6), E. Vilenius (5,7), J., Stansberry (8), R. Duffard (1), S. Fornasier (2,9), L. Jorda (3), and A., Thirouin (10) ( (1) Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalucia (CSIC)

TL;DR
This study analyzes thermal light curves of trans-Neptunian objects Haumea, 2003 VS2, and 2003 AZ84 using Herschel data to derive their physical and thermophysical properties, revealing very low surface thermal inertias.
Contribution
It provides new thermal light curve measurements and thermophysical modeling results for these TNOs, improving understanding of their surface properties and thermal inertias.
Findings
Haumea's thermal light curve is clearly detected at 100 and 160um.
Haumea has an extremely low thermal inertia (< 0.5 MKS).
The TNO population has a mean thermal inertia of about 2.5 MKS.
Abstract
Time series observations of the dwarf planet Haumea and the Plutinos 2003VS2 and 2003AZ84 with Herschel/PACS are presented in this work. Thermal emission of these trans-Neptunian objects were acquired as part of the TNOs are Cool Herschel Space Observatory key programme. We search for the thermal light curves at 100 and 160um of Haumea and 2003AZ84, and at 70 and 160um for 2003VS2 by means of photometric analysis of the PACS data. The goal of this work is to use these thermal light curves to obtain physical and thermophysical properties of these icy Solar System bodies. Haumea's thermal light curve is clearly detected at 100 and 160um. The effect of the reported dark spot is apparent at 100um. Different thermophysical models were applied to these light curves, varying the thermophysical properties of the surface within and outside the spot. Although no model gives a perfect fit to the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · High-pressure geophysics and materials
