The thermal emission of Centaurs and Trans-Neptunian objects at millimeter wavelengths from ALMA observations
E. Lellouch, R. Moreno, T. M\"uller, S. Fornasier, P. Santos-Sanz, A., Moullet, M. Gurwell, J. Stansberry, R. Leiva, B. Sicardy, B. Butler, J., Boissier

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to measure the thermal emission of Centaurs and TNOs at millimeter wavelengths, revealing low and variable radio emissivities that inform size and surface property estimates of these distant Solar System bodies.
Contribution
It provides new ALMA measurements for six objects, reassesses previous thermal data considering shape and pole orientation effects, and establishes a mean radio emissivity value for future studies.
Findings
Most objects have radio emissivities below unity.
Emissivity shows no clear correlation with physical parameters.
Revised diameter estimates improve understanding of surface properties.
Abstract
The sensitivity of ALMA makes it possible to detect thermal mm/submm emission from small/distant Solar System bodies at the sub-mJy level. Measured fluxes are primarily sensitive to the objects' diameters, but deriving precise sizes is somewhat hampered by the uncertain effective emissivity at these wavelengths. Following Brown and Butler (2017) who presented ALMA data for four binary TNOs, we report ALMA 1.29 mm measurements of four Centaurs (2002 GZ, Bienor, Chiron, Chariklo) and two TNOs (Huya and Makemake), sampling a range of size, albedo and composition. These thermal fluxes are combined with mid/far-infrared fluxes to derive the relative emissivity at radio (mm/submm) wavelengths, using NEATM and thermophysical models. We reassess earlier thermal measurements of these and other objects -- including Pluto/Charon and Varuna -- exploring effects due to non-spherical shape and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Space Exploration and Technology
