First Visible Wavelength Lightcurves for the Northern Hemispheres of Titania and Oberon
Author(s)
Colclasure, Abigail M.
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Advisor
Teague, Richard
Person, Michael J.
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The most recently published lightcurves of the large Uranian satellites were published in 1989 and there have been no published lightcurves of the satellites’ northern hemispheres. In this work, I present the first visible-wavelength lightcurves of the northern hemispheres of Titania and Oberon. Observations of the Uranian satellites are inherently difficult given their proximity to Uranus. Contamination from stray Uranian light is a major challenge and the background near the satellites must be well characterized. I mitigated the effects of stray Uranian light using point spread function photometry. I modelled Uranus with a Lorentzian with the same full width at half max as the stellar point spread function. I also determined that Uranus’s profile is poorly modeled with a Gaussian or with the stellar empirical point spread function. After accounting for Uranian light in this way, there remains significant correlation between the photometric measurements of Titania and Oberon. I considered what may be causing this correlation and suggest several paths forward.
Date issued
2025-05Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary SciencesPublisher
Massachusetts Institute of Technology