Constraints on (2060) Chiron's size, shape, and surrounding material from the November 2018 and September 2019 stellar occultations
Felipe Braga-Ribas, C. L. Pereira, B. Sicardy, J. L. Ortiz, J., Desmars, A. Sickafoose, M. Emilio, B. Morgado, G. Margoti, F. L. Rommel, J., I. B. Camargo, M. Assafin, R. Vieira-Martins, A. R. Gomes-J\'unior, P., Santos-Sanz, N. Morales, M. Kretlow, J. Lecacheux, F. Colas

TL;DR
This study used stellar occultations to constrain the size, shape, and surrounding material of Centaur object (2060) Chiron, providing first shape constraints and insights into its environment, including the absence of a ring similar to Chariklo.
Contribution
First shape constraints for (2060) Chiron derived from stellar occultations, including 3D shape modeling and analysis of surrounding material, with implications for ring presence.
Findings
Chiron's shape modeled as a Jacobi ellipsoid with specific axes.
No unambiguous evidence of rings around Chiron in 2018 data.
Derived physical properties and density consistent with previous measurements.
Abstract
After the discovery of rings around the largest known Centaur object, (10199) Chariklo, we carried out observation campaigns of stellar occultations produced by the second-largest known Centaur object, (2060) Chiron, to better characterize its physical properties and presence of material on its surroundings. We predicted and successfully observed two stellar occultations by Chiron. These observations were used to constrain its size and shape by fitting elliptical limbs with equivalent surface radii in agreement with radiometric measurements. Constraints on the (2060) Chiron shape are reported for the first time. Assuming an equivalent radius of R = 105 km, we obtained a semi-major axis of a = 126 22 km. Considering Chiron's true rotational light curve amplitude and assuming it has a Jacobi equilibrium shape, we were able to derive a 3D shape with a semi-axis…
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.
