We investigate the potential of the sparse data produced by the Catalina Sky Survey astrometric project (CSS for short) in asteroid shape and rotational state determination by the lightcurve inversion method. We show that although the photometric quality of the CSS data, compared to the dense data, is significantly worse, it is in principle possible that these data are for some asteroids with high lightcurve amplitudes sufficient for a unique shape determination.
CSS data are available for 180 asteroids for which shape models were previously derived from different photometric data sets. For 13 asteroids from this sample, we derive their unique shape models based only on CSS data, compare the two independent shape models together and discuss the reliability of models derived from only CSS data.
We also use CSS data to determine shape models for asteroids with already known rotational period values, derive 12 unique models and compare previously published periods with periods determined from the full 3D modeling by the lightcurve inversion method. Finally, we test different shape resolutions used in the lightcurve inversion method in order to find reliable asteroid models.