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Published February 10, 2014 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Finding Very Small Near-Earth Asteroids using Synthetic Tracking

Abstract

We present an approach that significantly increases the sensitivity for finding and tracking small and fast near-Earth asteroids (NEAs). This approach relies on a combined use of a new generation of high-speed cameras which allow short, high frame-rate exposures of moving objects, effectively "freezing" their motion, and a computationally enhanced implementation of the "shift-and-add" data processing technique that helps to improve the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for detection of NEAs. The SNR of a single short exposure of a dim NEA is insufficient to detect it in one frame, but by computationally searching for an appropriate velocity vector, shifting successive frames relative to each other and then co-adding the shifted frames in post-processing, we synthetically create a long-exposure image as if the telescope were tracking the object. This approach, which we call "synthetic tracking," enhances the familiar shift-and-add technique with the ability to do a wide blind search, detect, and track dim and fast-moving NEAs in near real time. We discuss also how synthetic tracking improves the astrometry of fast-moving NEAs. We apply this technique to observations of two known asteroids conducted on the Palomar 200 inch telescope and demonstrate improved SNR and 10 fold improvement of astrometric precision over the traditional long-exposure approach. In the past 5 yr, about 150 NEAs with absolute magnitudes H = 28 (~10 m in size) or fainter have been discovered. With an upgraded version of our camera and a field of view of (28 arcmin)^2 on the Palomar 200 inch telescope, synthetic tracking could allow detecting up to 180 such objects per night, including very small NEAs with sizes down to 7 m.

Additional Information

© 2014 American Astronomical Society. Received 2013 September 5; accepted 2013 December 12; published 2014 January 17. The authorswish to thank J. Giorgini of JPL for the simulation of what astrometric accuracy is needed to "not lose" an asteroid in a near-Earth orbit, and P. Chodas of JPL for supplying the estimates for the NEA population in the range of magnitudes H ∼ 26–31. We thank V. E. Zharov of the Lomonosov Moscow State University, A. H. Parker of UCB, G. McKeegan of Chabot Observatory, and J. Scott Stuart ofMIT for useful comments on the manuscript. We also thank the anonymous referee for a set of valuable comments that helped to improve the manuscript. The work described here was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

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Published - 0004-637X_782_1_1.pdf

Submitted - 1309.3248v2.pdf

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August 22, 2023
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