The equilibrium shape of (65) Cybele: primordial or relic of a large impact?
M. Marsset, M. Bro\v{z}, J. Vermersch, N. Rambaux, M. Ferrais, M., Viikinkoski, J. Hanu\v{s}, E. Jehin, E. Podlewska-Gaca, P. Bartczak, G., Dudzinski, B. Carry, P. Vernazza, R. Szak\'ats, R. Duffard, A. Jones, D., Molina, T. Santana-Ros, Z. Benkhaldoun, M. Birlan, C. Dumas

TL;DR
This study combines high-resolution imaging and light curves to analyze the shape and origin of asteroid (65) Cybele, suggesting it may be a primordial equilibrium body or shaped by ancient impacts, with implications for outer Solar System bodies.
Contribution
It provides detailed shape and density measurements of Cybele and investigates its origin through simulations, proposing it may be a primordial equilibrium object.
Findings
Cybele has a diameter of 263 km and a density of 1.55 g/cm³.
Its shape closely matches a Maclaurin equilibrium figure.
Cybele is dynamically unstable, likely recently placed in its current orbit.
Abstract
Cybele asteroids constitute an appealing reservoir of primitive material genetically linked to the outer Solar System, and the physical properties of the largest members can be readily accessed by large telescopes. We took advantage of the bright apparition of (65) Cybele in July and August 2021 to acquire high-angular-resolution images and optical light curves of the asteroid with which we aim to analyse its shape and bulk properties. 7 series of images acquired with VLT/SPHERE were combined with optical light curves to reconstruct the shape of the asteroid using the ADAM, MPCD, and SAGE algorithms. The origin of the shape was investigated by means of N-body simulations. Cybele has a volume-equivalent diameter of 263+/-3km and a bulk density of 1.55+/-0.19g.cm-3. Notably, its shape and rotation state are closely compatible with those of a Maclaurin equilibrium figure. The lack of a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAncient Egypt and Archaeology · Marine and environmental studies · Geology and Paleoclimatology Research
