Southeastern Section–56th Annual Meeting (29–30 March 2007)

Paper No. 6
Presentation Time: 1:00 PM-5:00 PM

ROTATIONAL PROPERTIES OF TRANSITIONAL SIZE MAIN BELT ASTEROIDS: PHOTOMETRIC OBSERVATIONS OF THREE OBJECTS


LUCAS, Michael P.1, FAUERBACH, Michael2, MON, Manuel J.2 and MARKS, Scott A.2, (1)Department of Geology, University of South Florida, 4202 E. Fowler Ave. SCA 528, Tampa, FL 33620, (2)Egan Observatory, Florida Gulf Coast University, 10501 FGCU Blvd. South, Fort Myers, FL 33965, mplucas@mail.usf.edu

We present lightcurves and analysis of rotational periods for three main belt asteroids in the 30 -50 km diameter range, which places them near or just above the estimated lower bound diameter of the “large asteroid” group (D > 40 km) on a basis of statistical analysis of asteroid rotation properties: 446 Aeternitas (D = 45.4 km), 1013 Tombecka (D = 31.9 km), and 1304 Arosa (D = 41.9 km). Photometric observations obtained using the 0.4m Ritchey-Chretien telescope at Florida Gulf Coast University's Egan Observatory during the period Dec. 2005 – Dec. 2006 produced lightcurves which yielded the rotational periods for the three asteroids. We derive refined rotational periods for the three objects: 446 Aeternitas (Psyn = 15.748 ± 0.002 h with an amplitude of ~ 0.40 mag), 1013 Tombecka (Psyn = 6.051 ± 0.001 h with an amplitude of ~ 0.50 mag), and 1304 Arosa (Psyn = 7.7478 ± 0.0001 h with an amplitude of ~ 0.375 mag). The rotational period of 1304 Arosa was derived in a collaborative effort between observatories in France, Italy, and the United States. Below approximately D = 40 km, larger deviations of the geometric mean spin rate from a Maxwellian distribution start to occur in the 30 – 40 km diameter range. Despite a factor of two range in rotational periods for the D > 40 km asteroids in this study - 446 Aeternitas (Psyn = 15.748 h) and 1304 Arosa (Psyn = 7.7478 h), the objects nonetheless plot in a Maxwellian distribution for large asteroids. As asteroid diameters decrease to between 40 and 10 km, a steep increase in the mean spin rate occurs. 1013 Tombecka (Psyn = 6.051 h) is then considered in the transitional region where the large and small asteroid groups overlap.