Asteroids seen by JWST-MIRI: Radiometric Size, Distance and Orbit Constraints
T. G. M\"uller, M. Micheli, T. Santana-Ros, P. Bartczak, D., Oszkiewicz, S. Kruk

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new method for analyzing JWST-MIRI infrared data to determine asteroid sizes and orbits without prior orbital knowledge, enhancing small-body population studies.
Contribution
The authors developed the STM-ORBIT method, enabling size and orbit constraints from multi-band infrared measurements without known object locations.
Findings
Confirmed radiometric size-albedo solution for asteroid 10920
Estimated size of the unknown MIRI object as 100-230 meters
Identified a new low-inclination asteroid in the main belt
Abstract
Infrared measurements of asteroids are crucial for the determination of physical and thermal properties of individual objects, and for the understanding of the small-body populations in the solar system as a whole. But standard radiometric methods can only be applied if the orbit of an object is known, hence its position at the time of the observation. We present MIRI observations of the outer-belt asteroid 10920 and an unknown object, detected in all 9 MIRI bands in close proximity to 10920. We developed a new method "STM-ORBIT" to interpret the multi-band measurements without knowing the object's true location. The method leads to a confirmation of radiometric size-albedo solution for 10920 and puts constraints on the asteroid's location and orbit in agreement with its true orbit. Groundbased lightcurve observations of 10920, combined with Gaia data, indicate a very elongated object…
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