- Earth's little brother found
-
LSST science book has an excellent chapter
of what the new generation of wide-field
survey telescopes like Pan_STARRS, LSST, etc
will learn about the Solar System.
-
"A New Century for Asteroids" by Richard P. Binzel,
Sky & Telescope, July 2001.
Wolfram Schroers's
Trojan asteroid tutorial
Stuart Ross Taylor's
Destiny or chance provides a good introduction to the Solar System
and its development.
William Hartmann's
Moons & Planets
The Nine Planets
web site; see the section on Asteroids.
IAU Minor Planet
Center : much useful information can be found here including a list of known Trojan
asteroids.
Why Study
Asteroids? A short article by Donald Yeomans.
<
-
"Ida and Company" by J.K.Beatty, Sky & Telescope, January
1995, p20.
-
"Fleeting Expectations: The Tale of an Asteroid" by J.V. Scotti,
Sky & Telescope, July 1998, p30
-
"Impact Hazards: Truth and Consequences" by G.L. Verschuur, Sky
& Telescope, June 1998, p63.
-
Spaceguard UK
-
UK NEO report
-
The book, "The System of Minor Planets"
by Gunter Roth.(copy available in the Astrolab).
-
Nova Astronomics' ECU
(available on AstroLab PCs) can be used to find the positions of specified asteroids.
Very accurate positions can be found at
JPL's HORIZONS System via their
Ephemeris Generator.
Note the different types of positions listed, i.e.
ICRF/J2000.0 and apparent.
A finding chart of the target area can be produced
several different ways. The Lowell Observatory has an
excellent web site with a set of tools, i.e.
Asteroid
Observing Services. The program ASTFINDER
generates a star chart around a given asteroid on a given date.
A size of 900 x 900 arcseconds is recommended. Durham is Observatory
Number 995.
For
the fainter asteroids it is recommended that images from the Digital Sky Survey of the
target area are also produced. Retrieve an image from the DSS (
LEDAS,
STScI,
ESO).
Save the images in FITS format and display on the PC with the
FITSVIEW program.
Astrolab's
Astrometry References
Astrolab's
Orbital Determination References
Chapter 7 of "The Handbook of Astronomical Image Processing"
by Richard Berry and James Burnell is an excellent introduction to
atrometry. This book also contains very good general information
about the reduction of CCD data. A copy is available in the AstroLab
and in the University's Main Library
Christian Buil's CCD Astronomy is also another excellent book.
A copy is available in the AstroLab and in the University's Main Library