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Observational detection of eclipses of J5 Amalthea by the Galilean satellites

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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Dynamical modelling of the Galilean moons for the JUICE mission

TL;DR: In this article, a sensitivity analysis of the influence on the dynamics of the system for a wide array of gravitational, tidal and rotational characteristics of the Jovian system is presented.
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Natural satellites mutual phenomena observations: Achievements and future

TL;DR: The goal of this paper is to show that some phenomena occurring during the equinox on the giant planets are worth to be observed, and to encourage observations in the next future especially for planetary systems for which no space mission is planned.
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Eclipses of the inner satellites of Jupiter observed in 2015

TL;DR: In this paper, the positioning accuracy of the inner satellites determined with photometry is estimated for dynamical studies, based on estimating the relative positions of the outer satellites of Amalthea and Thebe.
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Eclipses of the inner satellites of Jupiter observed in 2015

TL;DR: In this article, ground-based photometric observations of eclipses of Amalthea (JV) and Thebe (JXIV) by the Galilean moons were recorded during the 2014-2015 campaign of mutual events.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Precise timings of Galilean satellite eclipses and assessment of the E-3 ephemeris

TL;DR: Astrometric positions for the Galilean satellites are derived from high-precision timings of their jovian eclipses observed with CCD cameras between 1990 to 1993, and the positions are compared to Lieske's E-3 ephemeris as mentioned in this paper.
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Mutual events of the uranian satellites 2006–2010

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present predictions for 321 mutual eclipses and occultations of the uranian satellites from 2006 to 2010 and conclude that about 150 events should be detectable from different longitudes around the world.

Keck Observations of the 2002-2003 Jovian Ring Plane Crossing

TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented detailed radial profiles of the main ring, halo and gossamer rings, and interpreted the data together with information extracted from radio observations of Jupiter's synchrotron radiation.
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Photometric models for Galilean satellite astronomy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented tables of photocentric offsets for the Galilean satellites as functions of orbital longitude and solar phase angle, and estimated accuracy of these corrections is 32 km for Io, 45 km for Europa, 49 km for Ganymede, and 40 km for Callisto, but the latter two may be optimistic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Astrometric CCD observations of the inner Jovian satellites in 1999-2000

TL;DR: In this article, the inner positions of the inner Jovian satellites Thebe, Amalthea, Adrastea and Metis are compared with theoretical ones, and the dependence of the differences of the observed and calculated positions on the orbital longitude is presented for their observations.
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