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Featured researches published by Joseph R. Masiero.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

MAIN BELT ASTEROIDS WITH WISE/NEOWISE. I. PRELIMINARY ALBEDOS AND DIAMETERS

Joseph R. Masiero; Amy K. Mainzer; T. Grav; James Monie Bauer; Roc Michael Cutri; J. W. Dailey; Peter R. M. Eisenhardt; Robert S. McMillan; T. B. Spahr; M. F. Skrutskie; David J. Tholen; R. Walker; Edward L. Wright; E. DeBaun; D. Elsbury; Thomas N. Gautier; S. Gomillion; Ashlee Wilkins

We present initial results from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), a four-band all-sky thermal infrared survey that produces data well suited for measuring the physical properties of asteroids, and the NEOWISE enhancement to the WISE mission allowing for detailed study of solar system objects. Using a NEATM thermal model fitting routine, we compute diameters for over 100,000 Main Belt asteroids from their IR thermal flux, with errors better than 10%. We then incorporate literature values of visible measurements (in the form of the H absolute magnitude) to determine albedos. Using these data we investigate the albedo and diameter distributions of the Main Belt. As observed previously, we find a change in the average albedo when comparing the inner, middle, and outer portions of the Main Belt. We also confirm that the albedo distribution of each region is strongly bimodal. We observe groupings of objects with similar albedos in regions of the Main Belt associated with dynamical breakup families. Asteroid families typically show a characteristic albedo for all members, but there are notable exceptions to this. This paper is the first look at the Main Belt asteroids in the WISE data, and only represents the preliminary, observed raw size, and albedo distributions for the populations considered. These distributions are subject to survey biases inherent to the NEOWISE data set and cannot yet be interpreted as describing the true populations; the debiased size and albedo distributions will be the subject of the next paper in this series.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

NEOWISE Observations of Near-Earth Objects: Preliminary Results

Amy K. Mainzer; T. Grav; James Monie Bauer; Joseph R. Masiero; Robert S. McMillan; Roc Michael Cutri; R. Walker; E. L. Wright; Peter R. M. Eisenhardt; D. J. Tholen; T. B. Spahr; Robert Jedicke; Larry Denneau; E. DeBaun; D. Elsbury; T. Gautier; S. Gomillion; E. Hand; W. Mo; J. Watkins; Ashlee Wilkins; Ginger L. Bryngelson; A. Del Pino Molina; S. Desai; M. Gómez Camus; S. L. Hidalgo; I. S. Konstantopoulos; Jeffrey A. Larsen; C. Maleszewski; M. Malkan

With the NEOWISE portion of the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) project, we have carried out a highly uniform survey of the near-Earth object (NEO) population at thermal infrared wavelengths ranging from 3 to 22 μm, allowing us to refine estimates of their numbers, sizes, and albedos. The NEOWISE survey detected NEOs the same way whether they were previously known or not, subject to the availability of ground-based follow-up observations, resulting in the discovery of more than 130 new NEOs. The surveys uniform sensitivity, observing cadence, and image quality have permitted extrapolation of the 428 near-Earth asteroids (NEAs) detected by NEOWISE during the fully cryogenic portion of the WISE mission to the larger population. We find that there are 981 ± 19 NEAs larger than 1 km and 20,500 ± 3000 NEAs larger than 100 m. We show that the Spaceguard goal of detecting 90% of all 1 km NEAs has been met, and that the cumulative size distribution is best represented by a broken power law with a slope of 1.32 ± 0.14 below 1.5 km. This power-law slope produces ~13,200 ± 1900 NEAs with D > 140 m. Although previous studies predict another break in the cumulative size distribution below D ~ 50-100 m, resulting in an increase in the number of NEOs in this size range and smaller, we did not detect enough objects to comment on this increase. The overall number for the NEA population between 100 and 1000 m is lower than previous estimates. The numbers of near-Earth comets and potentially hazardous NEOs will be the subject of future work.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

Initial Performance of the NEOWISE Reactivation Mission

A. Mainzer; James Monie Bauer; Roc Michael Cutri; T. Grav; Joseph R. Masiero; R. Beck; P. Clarkson; T. Conrow; J. W. Dailey; Peter R. M. Eisenhardt; B. Fabinsky; Sergio Bernabe Fajardo-Acosta; John W. Fowler; Christopher R. Gelino; Carl J. Grillmair; I. Heinrichsen; Martha Kendall; J. Davy Kirkpatrick; Fengchuan Liu; Frank J. Masci; Howard L. McCallon; C. R. Nugent; M. Papin; E. Rice; D. Royer; T. Ryan; P. Sevilla; S. Sonnett; R. Stevenson; D. B. Thompson

NASAs Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) spacecraft has been brought out of hibernation and has resumed surveying the sky at 3.4 and 4.6 um. The scientific objectives of the NEOWISE reactivation mission are to detect, track, and characterize near-Earth asteroids and comets. The search for minor planets resumed on December 23, 2013, and the first new near-Earth object (NEO) was discovered six days later. As an infrared survey, NEOWISE detects asteroids based on their thermal emission and is equally sensitive to high and low albedo objects; consequently, NEOWISE-discovered NEOs tend to be large and dark. Over the course of its three-year mission, NEOWISE will determine radiometrically-derived diameters and albedos for approximately 2000 NEOs and tens of thousands of Main Belt asteroids. The 32 months of hibernation have had no significant effect on the missions performance. Image quality, sensitivity, photometric and astrometric accuracy, completeness, and the rate of minor planet detections are all essentially unchanged from the prime missions post-cryogenic phase.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

NEOWISE STUDIES OF SPECTROPHOTOMETRICALLY CLASSIFIED ASTEROIDS: PRELIMINARY RESULTS

A. Mainzer; T. Grav; Joseph R. Masiero; E. Hand; James Monie Bauer; David J. Tholen; Robert S. McMillan; T. B. Spahr; Roc Michael Cutri; E. L. Wright; J. Watkins; W. Mo; C. Maleszewski

The NEOWISE data set offers the opportunity to study the variations in albedo for asteroid classification schemes based on visible and near-infrared observations for a large sample of minor planets. We have determined the albedos for nearly 1900 asteroids classified by the Tholen, Bus, and Bus-DeMeo taxonomic classification schemes. We find that the S-complex spans a broad range of bright albedos, partially overlapping the low albedo C-complex at small sizes. As expected, the X-complex covers a wide range of albedos. The multiwavelength infrared coverage provided by NEOWISE allows determination of the reflectivity at 3.4 and 4.6 μm relative to the visible albedo. The direct computation of the reflectivity at 3.4 and 4.6 μm enables a new means of comparing the various taxonomic classes. Although C, B, D, and T asteroids all have similarly low visible albedos, the D and T types can be distinguished from the C and B types by examining their relative reflectance at 3.4 and 4.6 μm. All of the albedo distributions are strongly affected by selection biases against small, low albedo objects, as all objects selected for taxonomic classification were chosen according to their visible light brightness. Due to these strong selection biases, we are unable to determine whether or not there are correlations between size, albedo, and space weathering. We argue that the current set of classified asteroids makes any such correlations difficult to verify. A sample of taxonomically classified asteroids drawn without significant albedo bias is needed in order to perform such an analysis.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

WISE/NEOWISE Observations of the Jovian Trojans: Preliminary Results

T. Grav; Amy K. Mainzer; James Monie Bauer; Joseph R. Masiero; T. B. Spahr; Robert S. McMillan; R. Walker; Roc Michael Cutri; E. L. Wright; Peter R. M. Eisenhardt; Erin K. Blauvelt; E. DeBaun; D. Elsbury; Thomas N. Gautier; S. Gomillion; E. Hand; Ashlee Wilkins

We present the preliminary analysis of over 1739 known and 349 candidate Jovian Trojans observed by the NEOWISE component of the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE). With this survey the available diameters, albedos, and beaming parameters for the Jovian Trojans have been increased by more than an order of magnitude compared to previous surveys. We find that the Jovian Trojan population is very homogenous for sizes larger than ~10 km (close to the detection limit of WISE for these objects). The observed sample consists almost exclusively of low albedo objects, having a mean albedo value of 0.07 ± 0.03. The beaming parameter was also derived for a large fraction of the observed sample, and it is also very homogenous with an observed mean value of 0.88 ± 0.13. Preliminary debiasing of the survey shows that our observed sample is consistent with the leading cloud containing more objects than the trailing cloud. We estimate the fraction to be N(leading)/N(trailing) ~ 1.4 ± 0.2, lower than the 1.6 ± 0.1 value derived by Szabo et al.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

Asteroid family identification using the Hierarchical Clustering Method and WISE/NEOWISE physical properties

Joseph R. Masiero; A. Mainzer; James Monie Bauer; T. Grav; C. R. Nugent; R. Stevenson

Using albedos from WISE/NEOWISE to separate distinct albedo groups within the Main Belt asteroids, we apply the Hierarchical Clustering Method to these subpopulations and identify dynamically associated clusters of asteroids. While this survey is limited to the ~35% of known Main Belt asteroids that were detected by NEOWISE, we present the families linked from these objects as higher confidence associations than can be obtained from dynamical linking alone. We find that over one-third of the observed population of the Main Belt is represented in the high-confidence cores of dynamical families. The albedo distribution of family members differs significantly from the albedo distribution of background objects in the same region of the Main Belt; however, interpretation of this effect is complicated by the incomplete identification of lower-confidence family members. In total we link 38,298 asteroids into 76 distinct families. This work represents a critical step necessary to debias the albedo and size distributions of asteroids in the Main Belt and understand the formation and history of small bodies in our solar system.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

Thermal Model Calibration for Minor Planets Observed with Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer/Neowise

Amy K. Mainzer; T. Grav; Joseph R. Masiero; James Monie Bauer; E. L. Wright; Roc Michael Cutri; Robert S. McMillan; Martin Cohen; Michael E. Ressler; Peter R. M. Eisenhardt

With the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), we have observed over 157,000 minor planets. Included in these are a number of near-Earth objects, main-belt asteroids, and irregular satellites which have well measured physical properties (via radar studies and in situ imaging) such as diameters. We have used these objects to validate models of thermal emission and reflected sunlight using the WISE measurements, as well as the color corrections derived in Wright et al. for the four WISE bandpasses as a function of effective temperature. We have used 50 objects with diameters measured by radar or in situ imaging to characterize the systematic errors implicit in using the WISE data with a faceted spherical near-Earth asteroid thermal model (NEATM) to compute diameters and albedos. By using the previously measured diameters and H magnitudes with a spherical NEATM model, we compute the predicted fluxes (after applying the color corrections given in Wright et al.) in each of the four WISE bands and compare them to the measured magnitudes. We find minimum systematic flux errors of 5%-10%, and hence minimum relative diameter and albedo errors of ~10% and ~20%, respectively. Additionally, visible albedos for the objects are computed and compared to the albedos at 3.4 μm and 4.6 μm, which contain a combination of reflected sunlight and thermal emission for most minor planets observed by WISE. Finally, we derive a linear relationship between subsolar temperature and effective temperature, which allows the color corrections given in Wright et al. to be used for minor planets by computing only subsolar temperature instead of a faceted thermophysical model. The thermal models derived in this paper are not intended to supplant previous measurements made using radar or spacecraft imaging; rather, we have used them to characterize the errors that should be expected when computing diameters and albedos of minor planets observed by WISE using a spherical NEATM model.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

GRB 090426: the environment of a rest-frame 0.35-s gamma-ray burst at a redshift of 2.609

Emily M. Levesque; Joshua S. Bloom; Nathaniel R. Butler; Daniel A. Perley; S. Bradley Cenko; J. Xavier Prochaska; Lisa J. Kewley; Andrew J. Bunker; Hsiao-Wen Chen; Ryan Chornock; Alexei V. Filippenko; Karl Glazebrook; Sebastian Pedraza Lopez; Joseph R. Masiero; Maryam Modjaz; Adam N. Morgan; Dovi Poznanski

We present the discovery of an absorption-line redshift of z = 2.609 for GRB 090426, establishing the first firm lower limit to a redshift for a gamma-ray burst (GRB) with an observed duration of 90 per cent confidence) a member of the short/hard phenomenological class of GRBs. From analysis of the optical-afterglow spectrum we find that the burst originated along a very low H i column density sightline, with NH i < 3.2 × 1019 cm-2. Our GRB 090426 afterglow spectrum also appears to have weaker low-ionization absorption (Si ii, C ii) than ∼95 per cent of previous afterglow spectra. Finally, we also report the discovery of a blue, very luminous, star-forming putative host galaxy (∼2L *) at a small angular offset from the location of the optical afterglow. We consider the implications of this unique GRB in the context of burst duration classification and our understanding of GRB progenitor scenarios.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

WISE/NEOWISE Observations of the Hilda Population: Preliminary Results

T. Grav; Amy K. Mainzer; James Monie Bauer; Joseph R. Masiero; T. B. Spahr; Robert S. McMillan; R. Walker; Roc Michael Cutri; E. L. Wright; Peter R. M. Eisenhardt; Erin K. Blauvelt; E. DeBaun; D. Elsbury; Thomas N. Gautier; S. Gomillion; E. Hand; Ashlee Wilkins

We present the preliminary analysis of 1023 known asteroids in the Hilda region of the solar system observed by the NEOWISE component of the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE). The sizes of the Hildas observed range from ~3 to 200 km. We find no size-albedo dependency as reported by other projects. The albedos of our sample are low, with a weighted mean value of p_V = 0.055 ± 0.018, for all sizes sampled by the NEOWISE survey. We observed a significant fraction of the objects in the two known collisional families in the Hilda population. It is found that the Hilda collisional family is brighter, with a weighted mean albedo of p_V = 0.061 ± 0.011, than the general population and dominated by D-type asteroids, while the Schubart collisional family is darker, with a weighted mean albedo of p_V = 0.039 ± 0.013. Using the reflected sunlight in the two shortest WISE bandpasses, we are able to derive a method for taxonomic classification of ~10% of the Hildas detected in the NEOWISE survey. For the Hildas with diameter larger than 30 km, there are 67^(+7)_(–15)% D-type asteroids and 26^(+17)_(–5)% C-/P-type asteroids (with the majority of these being P-types).


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

Centaurs and Scattered Disk Objects in the Thermal Infrared: Analysis of WISE/NEOWISE Observations

James Monie Bauer; T. Grav; Erin K. Blauvelt; A. Mainzer; Joseph R. Masiero; R. Stevenson; Emily A. Kramer; Yan R. Fernandez; C. M. Lisse; Roc Michael Cutri; Paul R. Weissman; J. W. Dailey; Frank J. Masci; Russell G. Walker; Adam Waszczak; C. R. Nugent; Karen J. Meech; Andrew Lucas; George Pearman; Ashlee Wilkins; J. Watkins; S. R. Kulkarni; Edward L. Wright

The Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) observed 52 Centaurs and scattered disk objects (SDOs) in the thermal infrared, including 15 new discoveries. We present analyses of these observations to estimate sizes and mean optical albedos. We find mean albedos of 0.08 ± 0.04 for the entire data set. Thermal fits yield average beaming parameters of 0.9 ± 0.2 that are similar for both SDO and Centaur sub-classes. Biased cumulative size distributions yield size-frequency distribution power law indices of ~–1.7 ± 0.3. The data also reveal a relation between albedo and color at the 3σ level. No significant relation between diameter and albedos is found.

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James Monie Bauer

California Institute of Technology

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Roc Michael Cutri

California Institute of Technology

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T. Grav

Planetary Science Institute

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A. Mainzer

California Institute of Technology

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Amy K. Mainzer

California Institute of Technology

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Edward L. Wright

California Institute of Technology

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J. W. Dailey

California Institute of Technology

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C. R. Nugent

California Institute of Technology

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E. L. Wright

University of California

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