93 Minerva
Discovery | |
---|---|
Discovered by | James Craig Watson |
Discovery date | August 24, 1867 |
Designations | |
Named after | Minerva |
Main belt | |
Orbital characteristics | |
Epoch December 31, 2006 (JD 2454100.5) | |
Aphelion | 470.348 Gm (3.144 AU) |
Perihelion | 353.703 Gm (2.364 AU) |
412.026 Gm (2.754 AU) | |
Eccentricity | 0.142 |
1669.541 d (4.57 a) | |
Average orbital speed | 17.86 km/s |
226.139° | |
Inclination | 8.557° |
4.148° | |
275.747° | |
Physical characteristics | |
Dimensions | 141.5 ± 4 km (IRAS)[1] 156km (spherical)[2] |
Mass | 3.7×1018 kg (assumed)[3] |
Mean density | 1.9 g/cm³[2] |
5.982 hr[1] | |
Albedo | 0.073[1] |
Temperature | ~168 K |
Spectral type | C[1] G?[2] |
7.7[1] | |
93 Minerva (/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
- ^ a b c d e "JPL Small-Body Database Browser: 93 Minerva". Jet Propulsion Laboratory. 2011-12-29 last obs. Retrieved 2012-01-28.
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(help) - ^ a b c Franck Marchis (October 7, 2011). "Is the triple Asteroid Minerva a baby-Ceres?". NASA blog (Cosmic Diary). Retrieved 2012-01-28.
- ^ 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
- ^ The occultation of AG+29°398 by 93 Minerva. R. L. Millis, L. H. Wasserman, E. Bowell, O. G. Franz, R. NyeW. OsbornA. Klemola
- ^ Observed minor planet occultation events, version of 2005 July 26
- ^ a b Franck Marchis (2009-08-21). "The discovery of a new triple asteroid, (93) Minerva". Cosmic Diary Blog. Retrieved 2009-10-25.
External links
- Orbital simulation from JPL (Java) / Ephemeris