The Unusual Kuiper Belt Object 2003 SQ317

Abstract

We report photometric observations of Kuiper belt object 2013 SQ317 obtained between 2011 August 21 and 2011 November 1 at the 3.58 m New Technology Telescope, La Silla. We obtained a rotational lightcurve for 2013 SQ317 with a large peak-to-peak photometric range 0.85+/-0.05 mag, and a periodicity, P=7.210+/-0.001 hr. We also measure a nearly neutral broadband colour B-R=1.05+/-0.18 mag and a phase function with slope beta=0.95+/-0.41 mag/deg. The large lightcurve range implies an extremely elongated shape for 2013 SQ317, possibly as a single elongated object but most simply explained as a compact binary. If modelled as a compact binary near hydrostatic equilibrium, the bulk density of 2013 SQ317 is near 2670 kg m(-3). If 2003 SQ317 is instead a single, elongated object, then its equilibrium density is about 860 kg m(-3). These density estimates become uncertain at the 30% level if we relax the hydrostatic assumption and account for solid, "rubble pile"-type configurations. 2013 SQ317 has been associated with the Haumea family based on its orbital parameters and near-infrared colour; we discuss our findings in this context. If confirmed as a close binary, 2013 SQ317 will be the second object of its kind identified in the Kuiper belt.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…