The large Trans-Neptunian Object 2002 TC$_{302}$ from combined stellar occultation, photometry and astrometry data
J. L. Ortiz, P. Santos-Sanz, B. Sicardy, G. Benedetti-Rossi, R., Duffard, N. Morales, F. Braga-Ribas, E. Fern\'andez-Valenzuela, V., Nascimbeni, D. Nardiello, A. Carbognani, L. Buzzi, A. Aletti, P. Bacci, M., Maestripieri, L. Mazzei, H. Mikuz, J. Skvarc, F. Ciabattari

TL;DR
This study presents detailed measurements of the Trans-Neptunian Object 2002 TC302 using stellar occultation, photometry, and astrometry, revealing its size, shape, and potential satellite, with implications for its composition and structure.
Contribution
First detailed occultation data for 2002 TC302 combining multiple observational methods to estimate its size, shape, and possible satellite.
Findings
Elliptical fit indicates a 543 km by 460 km shape.
Possible satellite up to 300 km in diameter suggested.
No rings or atmosphere detected in occultation data.
Abstract
On 28th January 2018, the large Trans-Neptunian Object (TNO) 2002TC302 occulted a m15.3 star with ID 130957813463146112 in the Gaia DR2 stellar catalog. 12 positive occultation chords were obtained from Italy, France, Slovenia and Switzerland. Also, 4 negative detections were obtained near the north and south limbs. This represents the best observed stellar occultation by a TNO other than Pluto, in terms of the number of chords published thus far. From the 12 chords, an accurate elliptical fit to the instantaneous projection of the body, compatible with the near misses, can be obtained. The resulting ellipse has major and minor axes of 543 18 km and 460 11 km, respectively, with a position angle of 3 1 degrees for the minor axis. This information, combined with rotational light curves obtained with the 1.5m telescope at Sierra Nevada Observatory and the 1.23m…
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