Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published August 2013 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Main-belt comets in the Palomar Transient Factory survey – I. The search for extendedness

Abstract

Cometary activity in main-belt asteroids probes the ice content of these objects and provides clues to the history of volatiles in the inner Solar system. We search the Palomar Transient Factory survey to derive upper limits on the population size of active main-belt comets (MBCs). From data collected from 2009 March through 2012 July, we extracted ∼2 million observations of ∼220 thousand known main-belt objects (40 per cent of the known population, down to ∼1-km diameter) and discovered 626 new objects in multinight linked detections. We formally quantify the 'extendedness' of a small-body observation, account for systematic variation in this metric (e.g. due to on-sky motion) and evaluate this method's robustness in identifying cometary activity using observations of 115 comets, including two known candidate MBCs and six newly discovered non-MBCs (two of which were originally designated as asteroids by other surveys). We demonstrate a 66 per cent detection efficiency with respect to the extendedness distribution of the 115 sampled comets, and a 100 per cent detection efficiency with respect to extendedness levels greater than or equal to those we observed in the known candidate MBCs P/2010 R2 (La Sagra) and P/2006 VW_(139). Using a log-constant prior, we infer 95 per cent confidence upper limits of 33 and 22 active MBCs (per million main-belt asteroids down to ∼1-km diameter), for detection efficiencies of 66 and 100 per cent, respectively. In a follow-up to this morphological search, we will perform a photometric (disc-integrated brightening) search for MBCs.

Additional Information

© 2013 The Authors. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. Accepted 2013 May 30. Received 2013 May 26; in original form 2013 January 8. First published online: June 24, 2013. We thank the referee for useful comments. This work is based on data obtained with the 1.2-m Samuel Oschin Telescope at Palomar Observatory as part of the Palomar Transient Factory project, a scientific collaboration between the California Institute of Technology, Columbia University, Las Cumbres Observatory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center, the University of Oxford and the Weizmann Institute of Science (WIS). EOO is incumbent of the Arye Dissentshik career development chair and is grateful for support via a grant from the Israeli Ministry of Science. OA and EOO wish to thank the Helen Kimmel Center for Planetary Science at WIS. SRK and his group are partially supported by NSF grant AST-0507734. DP is grateful to the AXA research fund.

Attached Files

Published - MNRAS-2013-Waszczak-3115-32.pdf

Submitted - 1305.7176v1.pdf

Files

MNRAS-2013-Waszczak-3115-32.pdf
Files (6.1 MB)
Name Size Download all
md5:29fea68aa93ddb36ffcd50ae817d6b22
3.4 MB Preview Download
md5:547e22e5f6ba2d67edb223504018c795
2.7 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023