Photometry of the Didymos system across the DART impact apparition
Nicholas Moskovitz, Cristina Thomas, Petr Pravec, Tim Lister, Tom, Polakis, David Osip, Theodore Kareta, Agata Ro\.zek, Steven R. Chesley,, Shantanu P. Naidu, Peter Scheirich, William Ryan, Eileen Ryan, Brian Skiff,, Colin Snodgrass, Matthew M. Knight, Andrew S. Rivkin

TL;DR
This study presents detailed photometric observations of the Didymos system before and after the DART impact, analyzing ejecta behavior, optical properties, and mutual events to understand the impact's effects and ejecta evolution.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive lightcurve dataset and analysis of ejecta optical depth and decay, offering new insights into post-impact ejecta dynamics and photometric modeling.
Findings
Ejecta became optically thin within ~1 day after impact.
Ejecta brightness contribution faded after ~20 days.
Persistent ejecta tail observed through March 2023.
Abstract
On 26 September 2022, the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft impacted Dimorphos, the satellite of binary near-Earth asteroid (65803) Didymos. This demonstrated the efficacy of a kinetic impactor for planetary defense by changing the orbital period of Dimorphos by 33 minutes (Thomas et al. 2023). Measuring the period change relied heavily on a coordinated campaign of lightcurve photometry designed to detect mutual events (occultations and eclipses) as a direct probe of the satellite's orbital period. A total of 28 telescopes contributed 224 individual lightcurves during the impact apparition from July 2022 to February 2023. We focus here on decomposable lightcurves, i.e. those from which mutual events could be extracted. We describe our process of lightcurve decomposition and use that to release the full data set for future analysis. We leverage these data to place…
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
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Isotope Analysis in Ecology · Planetary Science and Exploration
