65 Cybele

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65 Cybele
Discovery
Discovered by Ernst Wilhelm Tempel
Discovery date March 8, 1861
Designations
Alternative names  
Minor planet
category
Main belt (Cybele)
Epoch December 31, 2006 (JD 2454100.5)
Aphelion 567.544 Gm (3.794 AU)
Perihelion 459.654 Gm (3.073 AU)
Semi-major axis 513.599 Gm (3.433 AU)
Eccentricity 0.105
Orbital period 2323.521 d (6.36 a)
Average orbital speed 16.03 km/s
Mean anomaly 279.683°
Inclination 3.548°
Longitude of ascending node 155.808°
Argument of perihelion 105.757°
Physical characteristics
Dimensions 237.3 km
Mass 1.4×1019 kg
Mean density ? g/cm³
Equatorial surface gravity 0.0663 m/s²
Escape velocity 0.1255 km/s
Rotation period ? d
Albedo 0.071 [1]
Temperature ~150 K
Spectral type C
Absolute magnitude 6.62

65 Cybele (pronounced /ˈsɪbɨli/ sib'-ə-lee) is one of the largest asteroids in the main belt. It gives its name to the Cybele asteroids which orbit outward from the Sun from the 2:1 orbital resonance with Jupiter. As a C-type asteroid it is dark in color and carbonaceous in composition. It was discovered on March 8, 1861 by Ernst Tempel and named after Cybele the earth goddess.

First Cybelian stellar occultation was observed on October 17, 1979 in the Soviet Union. A diameter of 230 km was derived, closely matching the diameter of 237 km determined by the IRAS satellite. During the same occultation, a hint of a possible 11 km wide satellite was detected. [1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Asteroid Data Sets