Abstract
A stable population of objects co-orbiting with Venus was recently hypothesized in order to explain the existence of Venus's co-orbital dust ring. We conducted a five days twilight survey for these objects with the Cerro-Tololo Inter-American Observatory 4 m telescope covering about 35 unique square degrees to 21 mag in the r band. Our survey provides the most stringent limit so far on the number of Venus co-orbital asteroids; it was capable of detecting 5% of the entire population of those asteroids brighter than 21 mag. We estimate an upper limit on the number of co-orbital asteroids brighter than 21 mag (approximately 400-900 m in diameter depending on the asteroid albedo) to be = - N 18+30-14. Previous studies estimated the mass of the observed dust ring co-orbiting with Venus to be equivalent to an asteroid with a 2 km diameter ground to dust. Our survey estimates <6 asteroids larger than 2 km. This implies the following possibilities: that Venus co-orbitals are nonreflective at the observed phase angles, have a very low albedo (<1%), or that the Venus co-orbital dust ring has a source other than asteroids co-orbiting Venus. We discuss this result, and as an aid to future searches, we provide predictions for the spatial, visual magnitude, and number density distributions of stable Venus co-orbitals based on the dynamics of the region and magnitude estimates for various asteroid types.
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CITATION STYLE
Pokorný, P., Kuchner, M. J., & Sheppard, S. S. (2020). A deep search for stable venus co-orbital asteroids: Limits on the population. Planetary Science Journal, 1(2). https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/abab9f
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