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Observational detection of eclipses of J5 Amalthea by the Galilean satellites

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors carried out observations of the small jovian satellite Amalthea (J5) as it was being eclipsed by the Galilean satellites near the 2009 equinox of Jupiter in order to apply the technique of mutual event photometry to the astrometric determination of this satellite's position.
Abstract
Aims. We carried out observations of the small jovian satellite Amalthea (J5) as it was being eclipsed by the Galilean satellites near the 2009 equinox of Jupiter in order to apply the technique of mutual event photometry to the astrometric determination of this satellite’s position. Methods. The observations were carried out during the period 06/2009−09/2009 from the island of Maui, Hawaii and Siding Spring, Australia with the 2m Faulkes Telescopes North and South respectively. We observed in the near-infrared part of the spectrum using a PanStarrs-Z filter with Jupiter near the edge of the field in order to mitigate against the glare from the planet. Frames were acquired at rates >1/min during eclipse times predicted using recent JPL ephemerides for the satellites. Following subtraction of the sky background from these frames, differential aperture photometry was carried out on Amalthea and a nearby field star. Results. We have obtained three lightcurves which show a clear drop in the flux from Amalthea, indicating that an eclipse took place as predicted. These were model-fitted to yield best estimates of the time of maximum flux drop and the impact parameter. These are consistent with Amalthea’s ephemeris but indicate that Amalthea is slightly ahead of, and closer to Jupiter than, its predicted position by approximately half the ephemeris uncertainty in these directions. We argue that a ground-based campaign of higher-cadence photometry accurate at the 5% level or better during the next season of eclipses in 2014-15 should yield positions to within 0. �� 05 and affect a corresponding improvement in Amalthea’s ephemeris.

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Eclipses of the inner satellites of Jupiter observed in 2015

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Eclipses of the inner satellites of Jupiter observed in 2015

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References
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Keck Infrared Observations of Jupiter's Ring System near Earth's 1997 Ring Plane Crossing

TL;DR: The first ground-based images of the jovian halo and gossamer ring were obtained by the W. M. Keck telescope on August 14 and 15, 1997, when the ring plane was almost edge-on (opening angle β=0.17°) and near opposition (phase angle α≈1.1°).
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Mutual phenomena of the Galilean satellites in 1973. III. Final results from 91 light curves.

TL;DR: In this paper, an analysis of photoelectric light curves of 91 mutual eclipses and occultations of the Galilean satellites that occurred from June to December 1973 is presented, which reduces all the data provided by these mutual events in one body, diminishes the latitude and longitude residuals of the unrevised theory by as much as a factor of about 10.
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Discovery of a new jupiter satellite.

TL;DR: This satellite has a circular orbit whose radius is 1.8 Jupiter radii, a period of 7 hours and 8 minutes, and a diameter of less than 40 kilometers and is located at the outer edge of the Jupiter ring.
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Properties and dynamics of Jupiter's gossamer rings from Galileo, Voyager, Hubble and Keck images

TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive examination of the Gossamer rings of Jupiter is presented, based on images from Voyager, Galileo, the Hubble Space Telescope and the W.M. Keck Telescope.
Journal ArticleDOI

Astrometric results of observations of mutual occultations and eclipses of the Galilean satellites of Jupiter in 2003

TL;DR: In this article, the photometry of mutual occultations and the eclipses of natural planetary satellites is used to infer very accurate data, which can be achieved by analyzing the light curves of the satellites observed during these mutual events.
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