High Resolution Search for KBO Binaries from New Horizons
H. A. Weaver, S. B. Porter, J. R. Spencer, The New Horizons Science, Team

TL;DR
This study used the New Horizons spacecraft's high-resolution imaging to discover and characterize binary systems among Kuiper belt objects, revealing the tightest binaries ever resolved and providing insights into their formation.
Contribution
The paper presents the first high-resolution search for KBO binaries from space, detecting the tightest binaries and extending binary frequency estimates to smaller objects and orbits.
Findings
2011 JY31 is a binary with a 198.6 km semi-major axis.
2014 OS393 is likely an equal brightness binary.
Binary frequency among observed CCs is about 67%.
Abstract
Using the New Horizons LORRI camera, we searched for satellites near five Kuiper belt objects (KBOs): four cold classicals (CCs: 2011 JY31, 2014 OS393, 2014 PN70, 2011 HZ102) and one scattered disk object (SD: 2011 HK103). These objects were observed at distances of 0.092-0.290 au from the New Horizons spacecraft, achieving spatial resolutions of 136-430 km (resolution is ~2 camera pixels), much higher than possible from any other facilities. Here we report that CC 2011 JY31 is a binary system with roughly equal brightness components, CC 2014 OS393 is likely an equal brightness binary system, while the three other KBOs did not show any evidence of binarity. The 2011 JY31 binary has a semi-major axis of 198.6 +/- 2.9 km, an orbital inclination of 61.34 +/- 1.34 deg, and an orbital period of 1.940 +/- 0.002 d. The 2014 OS393 binary objects have an apparent separation of ~150 km, making…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Isotope Analysis in Ecology
