Asteroid models reconstructed from ATLAS photometry
J. Durech, J. Tonry, N. Erasmus, L. Denneau, A. N. Heinze, H., Flewelling, and R. Vanco

TL;DR
This study reconstructed asteroid models from ATLAS photometry for about 180,000 asteroids, providing new shape and spin data, and exploring correlations with color indices, marking the first such inversion of ATLAS data.
Contribution
It is the first to invert ATLAS asteroid photometry, producing numerous new asteroid shape and spin models and analyzing their physical properties.
Findings
Derived approximately 2750 asteroid models, with 1800 being new.
Identified correlations between color index, albedo, and phase-angle slope.
Produced partial and full shape models, expanding asteroid physical data.
Abstract
The Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) is an all-sky survey primarily aimed at detecting potentially hazardous near-Earth asteroids. Apart from the astrometry of asteroids, it also produces their photometric measurements that contain information about asteroid rotation and their shape. To increase the current number of asteroids with a known shape and spin state, we reconstructed asteroid models from ATLAS photometry that was available for approximately 180,000 asteroids observed between 2015 and 2018. We made use of the light-curve inversion method implemented in the Asteroid@home project to process ATLAS photometry for roughly 100,000 asteroids with more than a hundred individual brightness measurements. By scanning the period and pole parameter space, we selected those best-fit models that were, according to our setup, a unique solution for the inverse problem. We…
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