Titania's radius and an upper limit on its atmosphere from the September 8, 2001 stellar occultation

T Widemann,Bruno Sicardy, R Dusser, C Martinez,W Beisker,E Bredner,David W Dunham, Paul D Maley,Emmanuel Lellouch,J E Arlot,Jerome Berthier, Francisco Abardia Colas,William B Hubbard, Ronald C Hill,J Lecacheux, J F Lecampion,S Pau,Mark Hyman Rapaport,F Roques,William Thuillot,C R Hills, A J Elliott, Robert Miles, Trevor Platt,Claudio Cremaschini, P Dubreuil,Cyril Cavadore, Ch Demeautis, P Henriquet,O Labrevoir, G Rau, J F Coliac, J Piraux, Ch Marlot, F Gorry, C Sire, B Bayle, E Simian, A M Blommers, J Fulgence,Cedric Leyrat, C Sauzeaud, B Stephanus, T Rafaelli, C Buil, R Delmas, V Desnoux, Clara Jasinski,Alain Klotz, D Marchais, M Rieugnie, G Bouderand, J P Cazard, C Lambin, P O Pujat, F Schwartz, P Burlot, P Langlais, S Rivaud, E Brochard, Ph Dupouy, M Lavayssiere, O Chaptal,K Daiffallah, C Clarassollauger,J Aloy Domenech, M Gabaldasanchez,X Otazuporter,D Fernandez,E Masana, A Ardanuy,R Casas, Jose Antonio Ros, F Casarramona, C Schnabel, A Roca, C Labordena, O Canalesmoreno, Victoria Gras Ferrer, Luis Miguel Gonzalez Rivas,J L Ortiz, J Fernandezarozena, L L Martinrodriguez, A Cidadao,Paula P Coelho, P Figuereido, Rogeria R Goncalves, C Marciano,Ricardo Rodrigues Nunes,Pedro Re, Camila Saraiva, F Tonel, J Clerigo,Carla Cristina Da Silva Oliveira, Cassius Reis,B M Ewensmith,Steven N Ward, Derek Ford, Joaquim M Goncalves, Jorge Marcelo Padovani Porto,J Laurindo Sobrinho,F Teodoro De Gois, M Joaquim,J Afonso Da Silva Mendes, E Van Ballegoij, Robert W Jones, H Callender,William J Sutherland, S Bumgarner, Mathieu Imbert,Braxton D Mitchell, J M Lockhart,Wylie C Barrow, D Cornwall, A Arnal, G Eleizalde, Angel G Valencia, V Ladino, T Lizardo, Claudia Ivette Damian Guillen,G Sanchez, Arturo Huerta De La Pena, S Radaelli,Juliano Martins Santiago,K K S Vieira, H Mendt, Patricia Rosenzweig,O Naranjo, O Contreras, F Diaz, Emilio Cadavid Guzman, F Moreno, L Omar Porras, Eduardo Recalde, M Mascaro, C Birnbaum, R Cosias, Eduardo Luiggi Lopez, Edgar Pallo, R Percz, D Pulupa, X Simbana, A Yajamin, P Rodas, H Denzau,Mike Kretlow, P Valdes Sada, Rene Landero Hernandez, Alberto Sanchez Hernandez, Barry C Wilson, Elena Castro, Jon Winkel

Icarus(2009)

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摘要
On September 8, 2001 around 2 h UT, the largest uranian moon, Titania, occulted Hipparcos star 106829 (alias SAO 164538, a V=7.2, K0 III star). This was the first-ever observed occultation by this satellite, a rare event as Titania subtends only 0.11 arcsec on the sky. The star's unusual brightness allowed many observers, both amateurs or professionals, to monitor this unique event, providing fifty-seven occultations chords over three continents, all reported here. Selecting the best 27 occultation chords, and assuming a circular limb, we derive Titania's radius: RT=788.4±0.6km (1-σ error bar). This implies a density of ρ=1.711±0.005gcm−3 using the value GM=(2.343±0.006)×1011m3s−2 derived by Taylor [Taylor, D.B., 1998. Astron. Astrophys. 330, 362–374]. We do not detect any significant difference between equatorial and polar radii, in the limit req−rpo=−1.3±2.1km, in agreement with Voyager limb image retrieval during the 1986 flyby. Titania's offset with respect to the DE405 + URA027 (based on GUST86 theory) ephemeris is derived: ΔαTcos(δT)=−108±13 mas and ΔδT=−62±7 mas (ICRF J2000.0 system). Most of this offset is attributable to a Uranus' barycentric offset with respect to DE405, that we estimate to be: ΔαUcos(δU)=−100±25mas and ΔδU=−85±25 mas at the moment of occultation. This offset is confirmed by another Titania stellar occultation observed on August 1st, 2003, which provides an offset of ΔαTcos(δT)=−127±20 mas and ΔδT=−97±13 mas for the satellite. The combined ingress and egress data do not show any significant hint for atmospheric refraction, allowing us to set surface pressure limits at the level of 10–20 nbar. More specifically, we find an upper limit of 13 nbar (1-σ level) at 70 K and 17 nbar at 80 K, for a putative isothermal CO2 atmosphere. We also provide an upper limit of 8 nbar for a possible CH4 atmosphere, and 22 nbar for pure N2, again at the 1-σ level. We finally constrain the stellar size using the time-resolved star disappearance and reappearance at ingress and egress. We find an angular diameter of 0.54±0.03 mas (corresponding to 7.5±0.4km projected at Titania). With a distance of 170±25 parsecs, this corresponds to a radius of 9.8±0.2 solar radii for HIP 106829, typical of a K0 III giant.
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Occultations,Uranus,Satellites,Satellites,Ices,Satellites
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