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Dive into the research topics where Paula Gabriela Benavídez is active.

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Featured researches published by Paula Gabriela Benavídez.


The Astronomical Journal | 2009

THE CANADA-FRANCE ECLIPTIC PLANE SURVEY—FULL DATA RELEASE: THE ORBITAL STRUCTURE OF THE KUIPER BELT*

Jean-Marc Petit; J. J. Kavelaars; Brett James Gladman; R.L. Jones; J. Wm. Parker; C. Van Laerhoven; P. D. Nicholson; G. Mars; P. Rousselot; Olivier Mousis; B. G. Marsden; Allyson Bieryla; M. Taylor; M. L. N. Ashby; Paula Gabriela Benavídez; A. Campo Bagatin; Guillermo Bernabeu

We report the orbital distribution of the trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) discovered during the Canada–France Ecliptic Plane Survey (CFEPS), whose discovery phase ran from early 2003 until early 2007. The follow-up observations started just after the first discoveries and extended until late 2009. We obtained characterized observations of 321 deg 2 of sky to depths in the range g ∼ 23.5–24.4 AB mag. We provide a database of 169 TNOs with high-precision dynamical classification and known discovery efficiency. Using this database, we find that the classical belt is a complex region with sub-structures that go beyond the usual splitting of inner (interior to 3:2 mean-motion resonance [MMR]), main (between 3:2 and 2:1 MMR), and outer (exterior to 2:1 MMR). The main classical belt (a = 40–47 AU) needs to be modeled with at least three components: the “hot” component with a wide inclination distribution and two “cold” components (stirred and kernel) with much narrower inclination distributions. The hot component must have a significantly shallower absolute magnitude (Hg) distribution than the other two components. With 95% confidence, there are 8000 +18001600 objects in the main belt with Hg 8.0, of which 50% are from the hot component, 40% from the stirred component, and 10% from the kernel; the hot component’s fraction drops rapidly with increasing Hg. Because of this, the apparent population fractions depend on the depth and ecliptic latitude of a trans-Neptunian survey. The stirred and kernel components are limited to only a portion of the main belt, while we find that the hot component is consistent with a smooth extension throughout the inner, main, and outer regions of the classical belt; in fact, the inner and outer belts are consistent with containing only hot-component objects. The Hg 8.0 TNO population estimates are 400 for the inner belt and 10,000 for the outer belt to within a factor of two (95% confidence). We show how the CFEPS Survey Simulator can be used to compare a cosmogonic model for the orbital element distribution to the real Kuiper Belt.


Icarus | 2006

The CFEPS Kuiper Belt Survey: Strategy and presurvey results

R.L. Jones; Brett James Gladman; Jean-Marc Petit; Philippe Rousselot; Olivier Mousis; J. J. Kavelaars; A. Campo Bagatin; Guillermo Bernabeu; Paula Gabriela Benavídez; J. Wm. Parker; P. D. Nicholson; M. Holman; Tommy Grav; A. Doressoundiram; Christian Veillet; H. Scholl; G. Mars

Abstract We present the data acquisition strategy and characterization procedures for the Canada–France Ecliptic Plane Survey (CFEPS), a sub-component of the Canada–France–Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey. The survey began in early 2003 and as of summer 2005 has covered 430 square degrees of sky within a few degrees of the ecliptic. Moving objects beyond the orbit of Uranus are detected to a magnitude limit of m R = 23 – 24 (depending on the image quality). To track as large a sample as possible and avoid introducing followup bias, we have developed a multi-epoch observing strategy that is spread over several years. We present the evolution of the uncertainties in ephemeris position and orbital elements of a small 10-object sample of objects tracked through these epochs as part of a preliminary presurvey starting a year before the main CFEPS project. We describe the CFEPS survey simulator, to be released in 2006, which allows theoretical models of the Kuiper belt to be compared with the survey discoveries. The simulator utilizes the well-documented pointing history of CFEPS, with characterized detection efficiencies as a function of magnitude and rate of motion on the sky. Using the presurvey objects we illustrate the usage of the simulator in modeling the classical Kuiper belt. The primary purpose of this paper is to allow a user to immediately exploit the CFEPS data set and releases as they become available in the coming months.


Science | 2008

The Extreme Kuiper Belt Binary 2001 QW322

J.-M. Petit; J. J. Kavelaars; Brett James Gladman; Jean-Luc Margot; P. D. Nicholson; Roger Jones; J. Wm. Parker; Matthew L. N. Ashby; A. Campo Bagatin; Paula Gabriela Benavídez; Jaime Coffey; P. Rousselot; Olivier Mousis; Patrick A. Taylor

The study of binary Kuiper Belt objects helps to probe the dynamic conditions present during planet formation in the solar system. We report on the mutual-orbit determination of 2001 QW322, a Kuiper Belt binary with a very large separation whose properties challenge binary-formation and -evolution theories. Six years of tracking indicate that the binarys mutual-orbit period is ≈25 to 30 years, that the orbit pole is retrograde and inclined 50° to 62° from the ecliptic plane, and, most surprisingly, that the mutual orbital eccentricity is <0.4. The semimajor axis of 105,000 to 135,000 kilometers is 10 times that of other near-equal-mass binaries. Because this weakly bound binary is prone to orbital disruption by interlopers, its lifetime in its present state is probably less than 1 billion years.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012

Rotational fission of trans-Neptunian objects: the case of Haumea

Jose Luis Ortiz; A. Thirouin; A. Campo Bagatin; R. Duffard; J. Licandro; Derek C. Richardson; Pablo Santos-Sanz; N. Morales; Paula Gabriela Benavídez

This research was partially supported by Spanish grants AYA2008-06202-C03-01, AYA-06202-C03-02, AYA2008-06202-C03-03, P07-FQM-02998 and European FEDER funds. RD acknowledges financial support from the MICINN (contract Ramon y Cajal). DCR acknowledges support from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration under grant No. NNX08AM39G issued through the Office of Space Science.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

Polarimetric observations of Hungaria asteroids

R. Gil-Hutton; D. Lazzaro; Paula Gabriela Benavídez

Aims. We present the results of a polarimetric program at Complejo Astronomico El Leoncito (Casleo), San Juan, Argentina. The aim of this campaign is to estimate the polarimetric properties of asteroids belonging to the Hungaria dynamical group. Methods. The data were obtained with the Casprof polarimeter at the 2.15 m telescope. The Casprof polarimeter is a two-hole aperture polarimeter with rapid modulation. The campaign began in 2000, and data on a sample of 24 members of the Hungaria group were obtained. We use the slope – albedo or Pmin – albedo relationships to get polarimetric albedos for 18 of these objects. Results. Only two Xe-type objects, 434 Hungaria and 3447 Burkhalter, shown a polarimetric behavior compatible with a high albedo object. The A-type asteroid 1600 Vyssotsky has a polarimetric behavior similar to what was observed by Fornasier et al. (2006) for 863 Benkolea, and four objects show Pmin values consistent with dark surfaces.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

Polarimetric survey of main-belt asteroids , III. Results for 33 X-type objects

Marcela Cañada-Assandri; Ricardo Gil-Hutton; Paula Gabriela Benavídez

Aims. We present results of a polarimetric survey of main-belt asteroids at Complejo Astronomico El Leoncito (Casleo), San Juan, Argentina. The aims of this survey are to increase the database of asteroid polarimetry, to estimate diversity in polarimetric properties of asteroids that belong to different taxonomic classes, and to search for objects that exhibit anomalous polarimetric properties. Methods. The data were obtained with the Torino and CASPROF polarimeters at the 2.15 m telescope. The Torino polarimeter is an instrument that allows the simultaneous measurement of polarization in five different bands, and the CASPROF polarimeter is a two-hole aperture polarimeter with rapid modulation. Results. The survey began in 2003, and up to 2009 data of a sample of more than 170 asteroids were obtained. In this paper the results for 33 X-type objects are presented, several of them are being polarimetrically observed for the first time. Using these data we found polarization curves and polarimetric parameters for different groups among this taxonomic class and that there are objects with very different albedo in the sub-classes of the X taxonomic complex.


Icarus | 2012

A comparison between rubble-pile and monolithic targets in impact simulations: Application to asteroid satellites and family size distributions

Paula Gabriela Benavídez; Daniel D. Durda; Brian L. Enke; William F. Bottke; David Nesvorný; Derek C. Richardson; Erik Asphaug; William Jon Merline


Planetary and Space Science | 2009

Collisional evolution of Trans-Neptunian populations: Effects of fragmentation physics and estimates of the abundances of gravitational aggregates

Paula Gabriela Benavídez; Adriano Campo Bagatin


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012

Collisional evolution of trans-Neptunian object populations in a Nice model environment

Adriano Campo Bagatin; Paula Gabriela Benavídez


Icarus | 2014

A six-part collisional model of the main asteroid belt

Helena Cibulková; M. Brož; Paula Gabriela Benavídez

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Juan Carlos Moreno Marín

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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