70 Panopaea
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Discovery A | |
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Discoverer | H. Goldschmidt |
Discovery date | May 5, 1861 |
Alternate designations B |
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Category | Main belt (Eunomia family) |
Orbital elements C | |
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Eccentricity (e) | 0.181 |
Semi-major axis (a) | 391.394 Gm (2.616 AU) |
Perihelion (q) | 320.456 Gm (2.142 AU) |
Aphelion (Q) | 462.332 Gm (3.090 AU) |
Orbital period (P) | 1545.723 d (4.23 a) |
Mean orbital speed | 18.26 km/s |
Inclination (i) | 11.585° |
Longitude of the ascending node (Ω) |
47.805° |
Argument of perihelion (ω) |
255.879° |
Mean anomaly (M) | 101.278° |
Physical characteristics D | |
Dimensions | 122.2 km |
Mass | 1.9×1018 kg |
Density | ? g/cm³ |
Surface gravity | 0.0342 m/s² |
Escape velocity | 0.0646 km/s |
Rotation period | ? d |
Spectral class | C |
Absolute magnitude | 8.11 |
Albedo (geometric) | 0.068 [1] |
Mean surface temperature |
~172 K |
70 Panopaea is a large main belt asteroid. It orbits close to the Eunomia asteroid family. However, it is a dark, primitive carbonaceous C-type asteroid and not related to the parent body of the Eunomia family which consists of S-type asteroids. Panopaea was discovered by H. Goldschmidt on May 5, 1861. It was his fourteenth and last asteroid discovery. It is named after Panopea, a nymph in Greek mythology.
[edit] References
Minor planets | ||
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Previous minor planet | 70 Panopaea | Next minor planet |
List of asteroids |
Vulcanoids · Near-Earth asteroids · Main belt · Jupiter Trojans · Centaurs · Damocloids · Comets · Trans-Neptunians (Kuiper belt • Scattered disc • Oort cloud)
For other objects and regions, see Asteroid groups and families, Binary asteroids, Asteroid moons and the Solar System.
For a complete listing, see List of asteroids. See also Pronunciation of asteroid names and Meanings of asteroid names.