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IOP Publishing, The Planetary Science Journal, 5(2), p. 202, 2021

DOI: 10.3847/psj/ac1f9b

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Size and Shape of (11351) Leucus from Five Occultations

Journal article published in 2021 by Marc W. Buie ORCID, Brian A. Keeney ORCID, Ryder H. Strauss, Ted E. Blank, John G. Moore, Simon B. Porter ORCID, Lawrence H. Wasserman ORCID, Robert J. Weryk ORCID, Harold F. Levison ORCID, Catherine B. Olkin ORCID, Rodrigo Leiva ORCID, Jerry E. Bardecker, Michael E. Brown ORCID, Lilah B. Brown, Michael P. Collins and other authors.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

Abstract We present observations of five stellar occultations for (11351) Leucus and reports from two efforts on (21900) Orus. Both objects are prime mission candidate targets for the Lucy Discovery mission. Combined results for Leucus indicate a very dark surface with p V = 0.037 ± 0.001, which is derived from the average of the multichord occultations. Our estimate of the triaxial ellipsoidal shape is for axial diameters of 63.8 × 36.6 × 29.6 km assuming that the spin pole is normal to the line of sight. The actual shape of the object is only roughly elliptical in profile at each epoch. Significant topography is seen with horizontal scales up to 30 km and vertical scales up to 5 km. The most significant feature is a large depression on the southern end of the object as seen from a terrestrial viewpoint. For this work we developed a method to correct for differential refraction, accounting for the difference in color between the target object and the reference stars for astrometry derived from ground-based images.