45 Eugenia
File:45 eugenia-01.jpg | |||||||||||||
Discovery[1] | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Discovered by | H. Goldschmidt | ||||||||||||
Discovery date | 27 June 1857 | ||||||||||||
Designations | |||||||||||||
Pronunciation | /juːˈdʒiːniə/ ew-JEE-nee-ə | ||||||||||||
Named after | Empress Eugénie | ||||||||||||
1941 BN | |||||||||||||
Main belt | |||||||||||||
Orbital characteristics[2] | |||||||||||||
Epoch November 26, 2005 (JD 2453701.5) | |||||||||||||
Aphelion | 440.305 Gm (2.943 AU) | ||||||||||||
Perihelion | 373.488 Gm (2.497 AU) | ||||||||||||
406.897 Gm (2.720 AU) | |||||||||||||
Eccentricity | 0.082 | ||||||||||||
1638.462 d (4.49 a) | |||||||||||||
Average orbital speed | 18.03 km/s | ||||||||||||
45.254° | |||||||||||||
Inclination | 6.610° | ||||||||||||
147.939° | |||||||||||||
85.137° | |||||||||||||
Known satellites | Petit-Prince S/2004 (45) 1 | ||||||||||||
Physical characteristics | |||||||||||||
Dimensions | 232 × 193 × 161 km[3] 305 × 220 × 145 km[4][5] | ||||||||||||
107.3 ± 2.1 km[4] | |||||||||||||
Mass | (5.69 ± 0.1) ×1018 kg[3] (5.8 ± 0.2) ×1018 kg[6][7][8] | ||||||||||||
Mean density | 1.1 ± 0.1 g/cm³[3] 1.1 ± 0.3 g/cm³[7] | ||||||||||||
Equatorial surface gravity | 0.017 m/s²[9] | ||||||||||||
Equatorial escape velocity | 0.071 km/s[9] | ||||||||||||
0.2375 d (5.699 h)[10] | |||||||||||||
117 ± 10° | |||||||||||||
Pole ecliptic latitude | -30 ± 10°[5] | ||||||||||||
Pole ecliptic longitude | 124 ± 10° | ||||||||||||
0.040 ± 0.002[4] | |||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
F[11] | |||||||||||||
7.46[4] | |||||||||||||
45 Eugenia is a large asteroid of the asteroid belt. It is famed as one of the first asteroids to be found to have a moon orbiting it. It is also the second known triple asteroid, after 87 Sylvia.
Discovery
Eugenia was discovered on June 28, 1857 by the Franco-German amateur astronomer Hermann Goldschmidt.[12] His instrument of discovery was a 4-inch aperture telescope located in his sixth floor apartment in the Latin Quarter of Paris.[13] It was the forty-fifth minor planet to be discovered. The preliminary orbital elements were computed by Wilhelm Forster in Berlin, based on three observations in July, 1857.[14]
The asteroid was named by its discoverer after Empress Eugenia di Montijo, the wife of Napoleon III.[12] It was the first asteroid to be definitely named after a real person, rather than a figure from classical legend,[15] although there was some controversy about whether 12 Victoria was really named for the mythological figure or for Queen Victoria.[citation needed]
Physical characteristics
Eugenia is a large asteroid, with a diameter of 214 km. It is an F-type asteroid, which means that it is very dark in colouring (darker than soot) with a carbonaceous composition. Like Mathilde, its density appears to be unusually low, indicating that it may be a loosely packed rubble pile, not a monolithic object. Eugenia appears to be almost anhydrous.[16] Lightcurve analysis indicates that Eugenia's pole most likely points towards ecliptic coordinates (β, λ) = (-30°, 124°) with a 10° uncertainty,[5] which gives it an axial tilt of 117°. Eugenia's rotation is then retrograde.
Satellite system
Petit-Prince
In November 1998, astronomers at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, discovered a small moon orbiting Eugenia. This was the first time an asteroid moon had been discovered by a ground-based telescope. The moon is much smaller than Eugenia, about 13 km in diameter, and takes five days to complete an orbit around it.
The discoverers chose the name "Petit-Prince" (formally "(45) Eugenia I Petit-Prince"). This name refers to Empress Eugenia's son, the Prince Imperial. However, the discoverers also intended an allusion to the children's novella The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, which is about a young prince who lives on an asteroid.[17]
S/2004 (45) 1
A second, smaller (estimated diameter of 6 km) satellite that orbits closer to Eugenia than Petit-Prince has since been discovered and provisionally named S/2004 (45) 1.[18] It was discovered by analyses of three images acquired in February 2004 from the 8.2 m VLT "Yepun" at the European Southern Observatory (ESO) Cerro Paranal, in Chile.[19] The discovery was announced in IAUC 8817, on 7 March 2007 by Franck Marchis and his IMCCE collaborators. It orbits the asteroid at about ~700 km, with an orbital period of 4.7 days.[18]
See also
- Dactyl and Ida, another asteroid and asteroid moon system catalogued by astronomers
References
- ^
"Discovery Circumstances: Numbered Minor Planets". IAU Minor Planet Center. Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. February 9, 2010. Archived from the original on 17 August 2010. Retrieved 2010-08-12.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
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suggested) (help) - ^ "ASTORB". Orbital elements database. Lowell Observatory.
- ^ a b c Baer, Jim (2008). "Recent Asteroid Mass Determinations". Personal Website. Retrieved 2008-12-07.
- ^ a b c d "Supplemental IRAS minor planet survey". Planetary Science Institute.
- ^ a b c Kaasalainen, M.; et al. (2002). "Models of Twenty Asteroids from Photometric Data" (PDF). Icarus. 159 (2): 369–395. Bibcode:2002Icar..159..369K. doi:10.1006/icar.2002.6907.
- ^ Marchis, F. "synthesis of several observations". Berkeley.
- ^ a b Marchis, F.; et al. (2004). "Fine Analysis of 121 Hermione, 45 Eugenia, and 90 Antiope Binary Asteroid Systems With AO Observations". Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society. 36: 1180. Bibcode:2004DPS....36.4602M.
- ^ Uncertainty calculated from uncertainties in the orbit of Petit-Prince.
- ^ a b On the extremities of the long axis.
- ^ "PDS lightcurve data". Planetary Science Institute.
- ^ "PDS node taxonomy database". Planetary Science Institute.
- ^ a b Schmadel, Lutz D. (2003). Dictionary of minor planet names. Physics and astronomy online library (5th ed.). Springer. p. 19. ISBN 3-540-00238-3.
- ^ J. C. (1867). "Memoirs of the Royal Astronomical Society". Memoirs of the Royal Astronomical Society. 36. Priestley and Weale: 155. Retrieved 2010-08-13.
- ^
Goldschmidt, H. (July 1857). "New Planet (45)". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 17: 263–264. Bibcode:1857MNRAS..17..263G. doi:10.1093/mnras/17.9.263b.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link) - ^ Tobin, William (2003). The life and science of Léon Foucault: the man who proved the earth rotates. Cambridge University Press. p. 301. ISBN 0-521-80855-3.
- ^ A. S. Rivkin (2002). "Calculated Water Concentrations on C Class Asteroids" (PDF). Lunar and Planetary Institute. Retrieved 2008-05-22.
- ^ William J. Merlin et al, "On a Permanent Name for Asteroid S/1998(45)1". May 26, 2000.
- ^ a b http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2007IAUC.8817....1M IAUC 8817
- ^ IMCCÉ Breaking News
External links
- Johnston Archive data
- Astronomical Picture of Day 14 October 1999
- SwRI Press Release
- Orbit of Petit-Prince, companion of Eugenia
- Shape model derived from lightcurve (on page 17)
- 14 frames of (45) Eugenia primary taken with the Keck II AO from Dec 2003 to Nov 2011 (Franck Marchis)
- 45 Eugenia at the JPL Small-Body Database