J/AJ/160/238   Reflectivity of 4 Galilean satellites with ISS   (Mayorga+, 2020)

Reflected light observations of the Galilean satellites from Cassini: a test bed for cold terrestrial exoplanets. Mayorga L.C., Charbonneau D., Thorngren D.P. <Astron. J., 160, 238 (2020)> =2020AJ....160..238M 2020AJ....160..238M
ADC_Keywords: Solar system; Planets; Photometry; Optical Keywords: Galilean satellites ; Exoplanet surface characteristics ; Exoplanet atmospheres Abstract: For terrestrial exoplanets with thin or no atmospheres, the surface contributes light to the reflected light signal of the planet. Measurement of the variety of disk-integrated brightnesses of bodies in the solar system and the variation with illumination and wavelength is essential for both planning imaging observations of directly imaged exoplanets and interpreting the eventual data sets. Here we measure the change in brightness of the Galilean satellites as a function of planetocentric longitude, illumination phase angle, and wavelength. The data span a range of wavelengths from 400 to 950nm and predominantly phase angles from 0° to 25°, with some constraining observations near 60°-140°. Despite the similarity in size and density between the moons, surface inhomogeneities result in significant changes in the disk-integrated reflectivity with planetocentric longitude and phase angle. We find that these changes are sufficient to determine the rotational periods of the moon. We also find that at low phase angles, the surface can produce reflectivity variations of 8%-36%, and the limited high phase angle observations suggest variations will have proportionally larger amplitudes at higher phase angles. Additionally, all of the Galilean satellites are darker than predicted by an idealized Lambertian model at the phases most likely to be observed by direct imaging missions. If Earth-sized exoplanets have surfaces similar to that of the Galilean moons, we find that future direct imaging missions will need to achieve precisions of less than 0.1ppb. Should the necessary precision be achieved, future exoplanet observations could exploit similar observation schemes to deduce surface variations, determine rotation periods, and potentially infer surface composition. Description: While en route to Saturn, Cassini/ISS took tens of thousands of images of Jupiter during a flyby spanning from 2000 October to 2001 March. The two cameras, the Wide Angle Camera (WAC) and the Narrow Angle Camera (NAC), had identical 1024 by 1024 pixel CCD detectors, but the resulting fields of view (FOVs) for the WAC and NAC were 3.5° and 0.35°, respectively. The data span a range of wavelengths from 400 to 950nm. File Summary: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FileName Lrecl Records Explanations -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ReadMe 80 . This file table3.dat 99 8000 Tabulated reflectivity as a function of moon, filter, phase angle, and planetocentric longitude -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See also: J/A+A/532/A36 : Galilean satellites mutual events in 2009 (Zhang, 2011) J/A+A/572/A43 : Saturnian satellites Cassini ISS astrometry (Cooper+, 2014) J/A+A/575/A73 : Astrometry of Saturnian satellites 2004-12 (Tajeddine+, 2015) J/A+A/580/A76 : Positions of satellites of giant planets (Gomes-Junior+, 2015) J/A+A/582/A8 : Astrometry of the main satellites of Uranus (Camargo+, 2015) J/other/SoSyR/49.383 : Galilean satellites, Jupiter position (Narizhnaya, 2015) J/AJ/153/147 : The orbits of Jupiter's irregular satellites (Brozovic+, 2017) J/other/KFNT/33.70 : Topocentric positions Saturn moons (Yizhakevych+, 2017) J/A+A/610/A2 : Saturnian satellites Cassini ISS astrometry (Cooper+, 2018) J/other/SoSyR/53.368 : Observations of the Galilean moons (Narizhnaya+, 2019) J/AJ/159/129 : 21 saturnian small moons brightness with ISS (Hedman+, 2020) Byte-by-byte Description of file: table3.dat -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Bytes Format Units Label Explanations -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1- 8 A8 --- Moon Galilean Satellite identification; Callisto, Europa, Ganymede and Io 10- 15 A6 --- Filt Cassini/ISS Filter (1) 17- 36 F20.16 deg PA [1.02/141] Phase angle 38- 59 F22.17 deg LON [-180/180] Planetocentric Longitude 61- 81 F21.19 --- IF [0.0003/0.75] Reflectivity (2) 83- 99 A17 --- Image Image name -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Note (1): Filters as follows: CL1VIO = centered at 420nm (2177 occurrences) CL1GRN = centered at 568nm (2368 occurrences) CL1RED = centered at 648nm (2101 occurrences) CB2CL2 = centered at 752nm (964 occurrences) CB3CL2 = centered at 938 nm (390 occurrences) Note (2): Reflectivity, I/F is the the intensity of the detected light, I, normalized to the incident solar flux, F. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- History: From electronic version of the journal
(End) Prepared by [AAS], Coralie Fix [CDS], 27-Jan-2021
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