YORP and Yarkovsky effects in asteroids (1685) Toro, (2100) Ra-Shalom, (3103) Eger, and (161989) Cacus
J. Durech, D. Vokrouhlicky, P. Pravec, J. Hanus, D. Farnocchia, Yu. N., Krugly, V. R. Ayvazian, P. Fatka, V. G. Chiorny, N. Gaftonyuk, A. Galad, R., Groom, K. Hornoch, R. Y. Inasaridze, H. Kucakova, P. Kusnirak, M. Lehky, O., I. Kvaratskhelia, G. Masi, I. E. Molotov, J. Oey

TL;DR
This study detects and refines measurements of the YORP and Yarkovsky effects on four near-Earth asteroids using lightcurve analysis, thermal data, and astrometry, confirming some effects and providing new estimates.
Contribution
It presents new detections and updated measurements of YORP and Yarkovsky effects on four specific asteroids, utilizing extensive observational data and modeling techniques.
Findings
Detected YORP acceleration for asteroid Cacus.
Tentative YORP detection for asteroid Toro.
Confirmed YORP effect for asteroid Eger.
Abstract
The rotation states of small asteroids are affected by a net torque arising from an anisotropic sunlight reflection and thermal radiation from the asteroids' surfaces. On long timescales, this so-called YORP effect can change asteroid spin directions and their rotation periods. We analyzed lightcurves of four selected near-Earth asteroids with the aim of detecting secular changes in their rotation rates that are caused by YORP. We use the lightcurve inversion method to model the observed lightcurves and include the change in the rotation rate as a free parameter of optimization. We collected more than 70 new lightcurves. For asteroids Toro and Cacus, we used thermal infrared data from the WISE spacecraft and estimated their size and thermal inertia. We also used the currently available optical and radar astrometry of Toro, Ra-Shalom, and Cacus to infer…
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