Characterization of material around the centaur (2060) Chiron from a visible and near-infrared stellar occultation in 2011
A.A. Sickafoose, A.S. Bosh, J.P. Emery, M.J. Person, C.A. Zuluaga, M., Womack, J.D. Ruprecht, F.B. Bianco, and A.M. Zangari

TL;DR
This study uses stellar occultation data to analyze the material around centaur (2060) Chiron, revealing potential rings, size estimates, and transient features, contributing new insights into its structure and environment.
Contribution
First detailed analysis of Chiron’s ring-like features and size using occultation data, suggesting the presence of rings rather than a shell of material.
Findings
Chiron's nucleus diameter is at least 160 km.
Detected narrow dips indicating possible rings with optical depth 0.5-0.9.
No significant near-infrared spectral features or correlation with optical features.
Abstract
The centaur (2060) Chiron has exhibited outgassing behaviour and possibly hosts a ring system. On 2011 November 29, Chiron occulted a fairly bright star (R approximately 15 mag) as observed from the 3-m NASA Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF) on Mauna Kea and the 2-m Faulkes Telescope North (FTN) at Haleakala. Data were taken as visible wavelength images and simultaneous, low-resolution, near-infrared (NIR) spectra. Here, we present a detailed examination of the light-curve features in the optical data and an analysis of the near-infrared spectra. We place a lower limit on the diameter of Chiron's nucleus of 160.2+/-1.3 km. Sharp, narrow dips were observed between 280-360 km from the centre (depending on event geometry). For a central chord and assumed ring plane, the separated features are 298.5 to 302 and 308 to 310.5 km from the nucleus, with normal optical depth approximately…
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