2101 Adonis

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2101 Adonis
Discovery
Discovered by Eugene Delporte
Discovery date February 12, 1936
Designations
Alternative names 1936 CA
Minor planet
category
Apollo, Mars crosser
Epoch October 22, 2004 (JD 2453300.5)
Aphelion 494.673 Gm (3.307 AU)
Perihelion 65.906 Gm (0.441 AU)
Semi-major axis 280.289 Gm (1.874 AU)
Eccentricity 0.765
Orbital period 936.742 d (2.56 a)
Average orbital speed 18.10 km/s
Mean anomaly 307.406°
Inclination 1.349°
Longitude of ascending node 350.580°
Argument of perihelion 42.438°
Physical characteristics
Dimensions 0.5—1.2 km 1
Mass 0.13—1.8×1012 kg
Mean density 2.0? g/cm³
Equatorial surface gravity 0.0001—0.0003 m/s²
Escape velocity 0.0003—0.0006 km/s
Rotation period ? d
Albedo 0.20—0.04 1
Temperature 197—207 K
Spectral type ?
Absolute magnitude 18.7

2101 Adonis was one of the first near-Earth asteroids to be discovered. It was discovered by Eugene Delporte in 1936 and named after Adonis, the beautiful youth with whom the goddess Venus fell in love. Adonis is believed to measure approximately 1 km in diameter.

In the close approach that led to its initial discovery, not enough observations could be made to calculate an orbit, and Adonis was lost until 1977 when it was rediscovered by Charles T. Kowal.

Adonis was the second Apollo asteroid to be discovered (after 1862 Apollo itself). It may be an extinct comet, and may be the source of some meteor showers. [1]

It comes within 30 Gm of the Earth six times in the 21st century, the nearest being 5.3 Gm in 2036.

[edit] Adonis in fiction

See Asteroids in fiction.

In the 1954 Tintin comic book Explorers on the Moon, a drunken Captain Haddock almost becomes a satellite of the asteroid, which is improbably depicted passing between the Earth and the Moon.

[edit] External links