Low thermal conductivity of the superfast rotator (499998) 2011 PT
Marco Fenucci, Bojan Novakovi\'c, David Vokrouhlick\'y, Robert J., Weryk

TL;DR
This study models the thermal conductivity of a small, fast-rotating asteroid's surface using Yarkovsky drift measurements, suggesting it likely has a regolith layer due to its low thermal conductivity.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel method to constrain the thermal conductivity of fast-rotating asteroids using Yarkovsky drift data and Monte Carlo simulations.
Findings
Thermal conductivity of asteroid 2011 PT is likely below 0.1 W/m/K.
Measured Yarkovsky drift indicates a low thermal conductivity surface.
Surface probably covered with a regolith-like insulating layer.
Abstract
Context: Asteroids with a diameter of up to a few dozen meters may spin very fast and complete an entire rotation within a few minutes. These small and fast-rotating bodies are thought to be monolithic objects because the gravitational force due to their small size is not strong enough to counteract the strong centripetal force caused by the fast rotation. Additionally, it is not clear whether the fast spin prevents dust and small particles (regolith) from being kept on their surface. Aims: We develop a model for constraining the thermal conductivity of the surface of the small, fast-rotating near-Earth asteroids. This model may suggest whether regolith is likely present on these objects. Methods: Our approach is based on the comparison of the measured Yarkovsky drift and a predicted value using a theoretical model that depends on the orbital, physical and thermal parameters of the…
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