New Horizons Observations of Kuiper Belt Object (15810) 1994 JR1
Red, Rough, Fast, and Perturbed: New Horizons Observations of KBO (15810) 1994 JR1 from the Kuiper Belt
Authors:
Porter et al
ABstract:
The
3:2 resonant KBO (15810) 1994 JR1 was observed by NASA's New Horizons
spacecraft on November 2, 2015 from a distance of 1.85 AU, and again on
April 7, 2016 from a distance of 0.71 AU. Acquired using the LOng Range
Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI), these were the first close observations
of any KBO other than Pluto, and the first ever of a small KBO.
Combining ground-based and HST observations at small phase angles and
the LORRI observations at higher phase angles, we produced the first
disk-integrated solar phase curve of a typical KBO from alpha=0.6-58
degrees. Observations at these geometries, attainable only from a
spacecraft in the outer Solar System, constrain surface properties such
as macroscopic roughness and the single particle phase function. 1994
JR1 has a rough surface with a 37+/-5 degree mean topographic slope
angle and has a relatively rapid rotation period of 5.47+/-0.33 hours.
1994 JR1 is currently 2.7 AU from Pluto; our astrometric points enable
high-precision orbit determination and integrations which show that it
comes this close to Pluto every 2.4 million years, causing Pluto to
perturb 1994 JR1. During the November spacecraft observation, the KBO
was simultaneously observed using the Hubble Space Telescope in two
colors, confirming its very red spectral slope. These observations have
laid the groundwork for numerous potential future distant KBO
observations in the proposed New Horizons-Kuiper Belt Extended Mission.
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