109 Felicitas
| Discovery | |
|---|---|
| Discovered by | Christian Heinrich Friedrich Peters |
| Discovery date | 9 October 1869 |
| Designations | |
Named after | Felicitas |
| Main belt | |
| Orbital characteristics[1] | |
| Epoch 31 July 2016 (JD 2457600.5) | |
| Uncertainty parameter 0 | |
| Observation arc | 146.39 yr (53470 d) |
| Aphelion | 3.4971 AU (523.16 Gm) |
| Perihelion | 1.89658 AU (283.724 Gm) |
| 2.6968 AU (403.44 Gm) | |
| Eccentricity | 0.29674 |
| 4.43 yr (1617.6 d) | |
Average orbital speed | 17.73 km/s |
| 30.6904° | |
| 0° 13m 21.18s / day | |
| Inclination | 7.8813° |
| 3.1617° | |
| 56.392° | |
| Earth MOID | 0.920053 AU (137.6380 Gm) |
| Jupiter MOID | 1.95452 AU (292.392 Gm) |
| Jupiter Tisserand parameter | 3.291 |
| Physical characteristics | |
| Dimensions |
89.44±2.5 km[1] 88.971 km[2] |
| Mass | 7.5×1017 kg |
Equatorial surface gravity | 0.0250 m/s² |
Equatorial escape velocity | 0.0473 km/s |
| 13.191 h (0.5496 d)[1][3] | |
|
0.0699±0.004[1] 0.07 ± 0.02[2] | |
| Temperature | ~170 K |
| GC (Tholen)[2] | |
| 8.75,[1] 8.759[2] | |
|
| |
109 Felicitas is a dark and fairly large main-belt asteroid. It was discovered by German-American astronomer C. H. F. Peters on October 9, 1869, and named after Felicitas, the Roman goddess of success.[4] The only observed stellar occultation by Felicitas is one from Japan (March 29, 2003).[5]
During 2002, 109 Felicitas was observed by radar from the Arecibo Observatory. The return signal matched an effective diameter of 89 ± 9 km. This is consistent with the asteroid dimensions computed through other means.[3]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 Yeomans, Donald K., "109 Felicitas", JPL Small-Body Database Browser, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, retrieved 12 May 2016.
- 1 2 3 4 Pravec, P.; et al. (May 2012), "Absolute Magnitudes of Asteroids and a Revision of Asteroid Albedo Estimates from WISE Thermal Observations", Asteroids, Comets, Meteors 2012, Proceedings of the conference held May 16–20, 2012 in Niigata, Japan (1667), Bibcode:2012LPICo1667.6089P.
- 1 2 Magri, Christopher; et al. (January 2007), "A radar survey of main-belt asteroids: Arecibo observations of 55 objects during 1999–2003", Icarus, 186 (1): 126–151, Bibcode:2007Icar..186..126M, doi:10.1016/j.icarus.2006.08.018
- ↑ Schmadel, Lutz D. (2012), Dictionary of Minor Planet Names (6th ed.), Springer, p. 23, ISBN 3642297188.
- ↑ Observed minor planet occultation events, version of 2005 July 26
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.