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93 Minerva

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93 Minerva
Discovery
Discovered byJames Craig Watson
Discovery dateAugust 24, 1867
Designations
Named after
Minerva
 
Main belt
Orbital characteristics
Epoch December 31, 2006 (JD 2454100.5)
Aphelion470.348 Gm (3.144 AU)
Perihelion353.703 Gm (2.364 AU)
412.026 Gm (2.754 AU)
Eccentricity0.142
1669.541 d (4.57 a)
17.86 km/s
226.139°
Inclination8.557°
4.148°
275.747°
Physical characteristics
Dimensions141.5 ± 4 km (IRAS)[1]
156km (spherical)[2]
Mass3.7×1018 kg (assumed)[3]
Mean density
1.9 g/cm³[2]
5.982 hr[1]
Albedo0.073[1]
Temperature~168 K
Spectral type
C[1]
G?[2]
7.7[1]

93 Minerva (/[invalid input: 'icon']m[invalid input: 'ɨ']ˈnɜːrvə/ mi-NUR-və) is a large trinary main-belt asteroid. It is a C-type asteroid, meaning that it has a dark surface and possibly a primitive carbonaceous composition. It was discovered by J. C. Watson on August 24, 1867, and named after Minerva, the Roman equivalent of Athena, goddess of wisdom. An occultation of a star by Minerva was observed in France, Spain and the United States on November 22, 1982. An occultation diameter of ~170 km was measured from the observations. Since then two more occultations have been observed, which give an estimated mean diameter of ~150 km for diameter.[4][5]

Satellite system

On August 16, 2009, at 13:36 UT, the Keck Observatory's adaptive optics system revealed that the asteroid 93 Minerva possesses 2 small moons.[6] The two moons are 4 and 3 km in size and the projected separation from Minerva corresponds to 630 km (8.8 x Rprimary) and 380 km (5.2 x Rprimary) respectively.[6]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "JPL Small-Body Database Browser: 93 Minerva". Jet Propulsion Laboratory. 2011-12-29 last obs. Retrieved 2012-01-28. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ a b c Franck Marchis (October 7, 2011). "Is the triple Asteroid Minerva a baby-Ceres?". NASA blog (Cosmic Diary). Retrieved 2012-01-28.
  3. ^ Using a spherical radius of 78 km; volume of a sphere * density of 1.9 g/cm³ yields a mass (m=d*v) of 3.77E+18 kg
  4. ^ The occultation of AG+29°398 by 93 Minerva. R. L. Millis, L. H. Wasserman, E. Bowell, O. G. Franz, R. NyeW. OsbornA. Klemola
  5. ^ Observed minor planet occultation events, version of 2005 July 26
  6. ^ a b Franck Marchis (2009-08-21). "The discovery of a new triple asteroid, (93) Minerva". Cosmic Diary Blog. Retrieved 2009-10-25.