Litcius/Paper detail

A satellite orbit drift in binary near-Earth asteroids (66391) 1999 KW4 and (88710) 2001 SL9 — Indication of the BYORP effect

P. Scheirich, Petr Pravec, P. Kušnirák, K. Hornoch, Jay W. McMahon, Daniel J. Scheeres, D. Čapek, Donald P. Pray, H. Kučáková, A. Galád, J. Vraštil, Yu. N. Krugly, Nicholas Moskovitz, Louis Avner, B. A. Skiff, R. S. McMillan, Jeffrey A. Larsen, Melissa J. Brucker, A. F. Tubbiolo, Walt Cooney, J. Gross, D. Terrell, О. Бурхонов, K. E. Ergashev, Sh. A. Ehgamberdiev, Petr Fatka, Russell I. Durkee, Eva Lilly Schunova, R. Inasaridze, V. Ayvazian, G. V. Kapanadze, N. M. Gaftonyuk, Juan A. Sanchez, V. Reddy, L. McGraw, Michael S. P. Kelley, I. Molotov

2021Icarus28 citationsDOI

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsOrbit (dynamics)AsteroidEccentricity (behavior)Orbital eccentricityElliptic orbitOrbital elementsBinary numberOrbital inclinationGeodesyEclipticAstronomyGeologyPlanetMathematicsMagnetic fieldAerospace engineeringEngineeringLawArithmeticPolitical scienceSolar windQuantum mechanicsAstro and Planetary SciencePlanetary Science and ExplorationGeology and Paleoclimatology Research
A satellite orbit drift in binary near-Earth asteroids (66391) 1999 KW4 and (88710) 2001 SL9 — Indication of the BYORP effect | Litcius