43 Ariadne
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Discovery
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Discovered by | N. R. Pogson |
Discovery date | April 15, 1857 |
Designations
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Alternative names | none |
Minor planet category |
Main belt (Flora family) |
Epoch November 26, 2005 (JD 2453700.5) | |
Aphelion | 384.954 Gm (2.573 AU) |
Perihelion | 274.339 Gm (1.834 AU) |
Semi-major axis | 329.646 Gm (2.204 AU) |
Eccentricity | 0.168 |
Orbital period | 1194.766 d (3.27 a) |
Average orbital speed | 19.92 km/s |
Mean anomaly | 101.582° |
Inclination | 3.464° |
Longitude of ascending node | 264.937° |
Argument of perihelion | 15.948° |
Physical characteristics
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Dimensions | 95×60×50 km[1][2][3] |
Mass | ~4.0×1017 kg (estimate) |
Mean density | ~2.7 g/cm³ (estimate)[5] |
Equatorial surface gravity | ~0.012 m/s² (estimate) |
Escape velocity | ~0.034 km/s (estimate) |
Rotation period | 0.2401 d [4] |
Albedo | 0.274 (geometric)[1] |
Temperature | ~178 K max: 275K (+2° C) |
Spectral type | S-type asteroid |
Apparent magnitude | 8.78 to 13.29 |
Absolute magnitude | 7.93 |
Angular diameter | 0.11" to 0.025" |
43 Ariadne (IPA: /ˌæriˈædni/) is a fairly large and bright main belt asteroid. It is the second-largest member of the Flora asteroid family. It was discovered by N. R. Pogson on April 15, 1857 and named after the Greek heroine Ariadne.
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[edit] Characteristics
Ariadne is very elongate (almost twice as long as its smallest dimension) and likely bi-lobed[3] or at least very angular. It is a retrograde rotator, although its pole points almost parallel to the ecliptic towards ecliptic coordinates (β, λ) = (-15°, 235°) with a 10° uncertainty[2]. This gives an axial tilt of about 105°.
[edit] Trivia
- For reasons unknown, "Asteroid 43 Ariadne" was included in a list of names of supporters of the NASA spacecraft Stardust that was stored on a microchip within the spacecraft.
- The maximum apparent size of Ariadne is equivalent to the maximum apparent size of Pluto.
[edit] References
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M. Kaasalainen, J. Torppa & J. Piironen Models of Twenty Asteroids from Photometric Data, Icarus, Vol. 159, p. 369 (2002).
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P. Tanga et al Asteroid observations with the Hubble Space Telescope, Astronomy & Astrophysics, Vol. 401, p. 733 (2003).
- PDS lightcurve data
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G. A. Krasinsky et al Hidden Mass in the Asteroid Belt, Icarus, Vol. 158, p. 98 (2002).
[edit] External links
- shape model deduced from lightcurve
- bi-lobed shape model from Hubble lightcurves
- Orbital simulation from JPL (Java) / Ephemeris
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