Potential asteroid discoveries by the ESA Gaia mission

B. Carry, W. Thuillot, F. Spoto, P. David, J. Berthier, P. Tanga, F. Mignard, S. Bouquillon, R. Mendez, J. Rivet, A. L. V. Suu, A. Dell’Oro, G. Fedorets, B. Frezouls, M. Granvik, J. Guiraud, K. Muinonen, C. Panem, T. Pauwels, W. Roux, G. Walmsley, J. Petit, L. Abe, V. Ayvazian, K. Baillié, A. Baransky, P. Bendjoya, M. Dennefeld, J. Desmars, S. Eggl, V. Godunova, D. Hestroffer, R. Inasaridze, V. Kashuba, Y. Krugly, I. Molotov, V. Robert, A. Simon, I. Sokolov, D. Souami, V. Tarady, F. Taris, V. Troianskyi, V. Vasylenko, D. Vernet
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Since July 2014, the ESA Gaia mission has been surveying the entire sky down to magnitude 20.7 in the visible. In addition to the millions of stars, thousands of Solar System Objects (SSOs) are observed daily. By comparing their positions to those of known objects, a daily processing pipeline filters known objects from potential discoveries. However, owing to Gaia's specific scanning law designed for stars, potential newly discovered moving objects are characterized by very few observations, acquired over a limited time. This aspect was recognized early in the design of the Gaia data processing. A daily processing pipeline dedicated to these candidate discoveries was set up to release calls for observations to a network of ground-based telescopes. Their aim is to acquire follow-up astrometry and to characterize these objects. From the astrometry measured by Gaia, preliminary orbital solutions are determined, allowing to predict the position of these potentially new discovered objects in the sky accounting for the large parallax between Gaia and the Earth (separated by 0.01 au). A specific task within the Gaia Consortium has been responsible for the distribution of requests for follow-up observations of potential Gaia SSO discoveries. Since late 2016, these calls for observations (called alerts) are published daily via a Web interface, freely available to anyone world-wide. Between November 2016 and July 2020, over 1700 alerts have been published, leading to the successful recovery of more than 200 objects. Among those, six have provisional designation assigned with the Gaia observations, the others being previously known objects with poorly characterized orbits, precluding identification at the time of Gaia observations. There is a clear trend for objects with a high inclination to be unidentified, revealing a clear bias in the current census of SSOs against high inclination populations.
欧洲航天局盖亚任务潜在的小行星发现
自2014年7月以来,欧洲航天局的盖亚任务一直在测量整个天空的可见亮度,直到20.7等。除了数以百万计的恒星,每天还观测到数千个太阳系天体(sso)。通过将它们的位置与已知物体的位置进行比较,每日处理管道将已知物体从潜在的发现中过滤出来。然而,由于盖亚为恒星设计的特殊扫描定律,潜在的新发现的运动物体的特征是在有限的时间内获得的很少的观测。这方面早在盖亚数据处理的设计中就被认识到了。建立了一个专门处理这些候选发现的日常处理管道,以便向地面望远镜网络发布观测请求。他们的目标是获得后续的天体测量和表征这些物体。从盖亚测量的天体测量中,初步的轨道解被确定,允许预测这些潜在的新发现的物体在天空中的位置,因为盖亚和地球之间的大视差(相隔0.01 au)。盖亚联盟内部的一项具体任务是负责分发对潜在盖亚SSO发现的后续观测请求。自2016年底以来,这些观察呼吁(称为警报)每天通过网络界面发布,全世界任何人都可以免费获得。2016年11月至2020年7月期间,发布了1700多个警报,成功恢复了200多个物体。在这些天体中,有6个被赋予了盖亚观测的临时名称,其他的是先前已知的轨道特征不明显的天体,因此无法在盖亚观测时进行识别。有一种明显的趋势是,具有高倾向性的物体是不确定的,这表明目前对高倾向性人口的sso普查明显存在偏见。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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