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Spitzer’s Solar System studies of asteroids, planets and the zodiacal cloud

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posted on 2020-11-23, 10:18 authored by DE Trilling, C Lisse, DP Cruikshank, JP Emery, Y Fernández, LN Fletcher, DP Hamilton, HB Hammel, AW Harris, M Mueller, GS Orton, YJ Pendleton, WT Reach, N Rowe-Gurney, M Skrutskie, A Verbiscer
In its 16 years of scientific measurements, the Spitzer Space Telescope performed a number of groundbreaking and key infrared measurements of Solar System objects near and far. In this second of two Review Articles, we describe results from Spitzer observations of asteroids, dust rings and planets that provide new insight into the formation and evolution of our Solar System. The key Spitzer results presented here can be grouped into three broad classes: characterizing the physical properties of asteroids, notably including a large survey of near-Earth objects; detection and characterization of several dust/debris disks in the Solar System; and comprehensive characterization of ice giant (Uranus and Neptune) atmospheres. Many of these observations provide critical foundations for future infrared space-based observations.

History

Citation

Nature Astronomy volume 4, pp. 940–946 (2020)

Author affiliation

Department of Physics and Astronomy

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Nature Astronomy

Volume

4

Issue

10

Pagination

940 - 946

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH

issn

2397-3366

eissn

2397-3366

Acceptance date

2020-08-28

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2021-04-08

Language

English

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