216 Kleopatra

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

216 Kleopatra
Discovery
Discovered by: Johann Palisa
Discovery date: April 10, 1880
Alternative names: A905 OA, A910 RA
Minor planet category: Main belt
Orbital characteristics
Epoch 30 January 2005 (JD 2453400.5)
Aphelion distance: 523.049 Gm (3.496 AU)
Perihelion distance: 312.544 Gm (2.089 AU)
Semi-major axis: 417.796 Gm (2.793 AU)
Eccentricity: 0.252
Orbital period: 1704.704 d (4.67 a)
Avg. orbital speed: 17.82 km/s
Mean anomaly: 55.259°
Inclination: 13.136°
Longitude of ascending node: 215.672°
Argument of perihelion: 179.099°
Physical characteristics
Dimensions: 217 × 94 × 81 km
Mass: unknown
Mean density: 3.5+
Rotation period: 5.385 h
Albedo: 0.116
Temperature: unknown
Spectral type: M
Absolute magnitude: 7.3

216 Kleopatra is a Main belt asteroid that was discovered by Johann Palisa on April 10, 1880 in Pola. It is named after Cleopatra, the Queen of Egypt.

Dog bone shaped asteroid Kleopatra
Dog bone shaped asteroid Kleopatra

Kleopatra is an unusual object. Its bilobate shape was revealed by adaptive optics on the ESO 3.6m telescope at La Silla. By bouncing radar signals off the asteroid, a team of astronomers at the Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico were able to develop a more detailed computer model of its shape, which confirmed the dog-bone like shape. A favored explanation is that Kleopatra is a contact binary: two similarly-sized asteroids that have collided and stuck together instead of breaking apart.

Kleopatra is a relatively large asteroid, measuring 217 × 94 × 81 km. It is believed to be a loosely packed metallic object, based on its radar albedo.

[edit] External links

[edit] References


Minor planets
Previous minor planet 216 Kleopatra Next minor planet
List of asteroids