A polarimetric study of asteroids in comet-like orbits
Jooyeon Geem, Masateru Ishiguro, Yoonsoo P. Bach, Daisuke Kuroda,, Hiroyuki Naito, Hidekazu Hanayama, Yoonyoung Kim, Yuna G. Kwon, Sunho Jin,, Tomohiko Sekiguchi, Ryo Okazaki, Jeremie J. Vaubaillon, Masataka Imai,, Tatsuharu Oono, Yuki Futamura, Seiko Takagi, Mitsuteru Sato

TL;DR
This study presents the first polarimetric observations of asteroids in comet-like orbits, revealing diverse origins and aiding in distinguishing dormant comets from asteroids.
Contribution
It introduces polarimetry as a new method to classify ACOs and links polarimetric properties with their origins, enhancing understanding of small bodies in the Solar System.
Findings
Don Quixote and Hidalgo have comet-like polarimetric properties.
1984 QY1's properties suggest a main belt origin.
Polarimetry complements spectral data for origin identification.
Abstract
Context. Asteroids in comet-like orbits (ACOs) consist of asteroids and dormant comets. Due to their similar appearance, it is challenging to distinguish dormant comets from ACOs via general telescopic observations. Surveys for discriminating dormant comets from the ACO population have been conducted via spectroscopy or optical and mid-infrared photometry. However, they have not been conducted through polarimetry. Aims. We conducted the first polarimetric research of ACOs. Methods. We conducted a linear polarimetric pilot survey for three ACOs: (944) Hidalgo, (3552) Don Quixote, and (331471) 1984 QY1. These objects are unambiguously classified into ACOs in terms of their orbital elements (i.e., the Tisserand parameters with respect to Jupiter significantly less than 3). Three ACOs were observed by the 1.6 m Pirka Telescope from UT 2016 May 25 to UT 2019 July 22 (13…
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