(277810) 2006 FV35

2006 FV35
Discovery[1]
Discovery site Steward Observatory
Discovery date 2006-03-29
Designations
Minor planet
category
Apollo
Epoch 2455000.5 (2009-Jun-18.0)
Ap 1.3789982 ±
1.4302e-07 AU
Peri .62308 ±
1.7483e-05 AU
Semi-major axis 1.0010399 ±
1.0382e-07 AU
Eccentricity .37756 ±
1.7528e-05
Orbital period 365.82681 ±
5.6912e-05 d
Mean anomaly 294.225 ±
0.0010627°
Inclination 7.1016 ±
0.00044871°
Longitude of ascending node 179.5739 ±
0.0002913°
Longitude of periastron 170.8720 ±
0.00054382°
Time of periastron 2455067.338 ±
0.0010758 jd
Physical characteristics
Mean radius 70–160 m[1]
Absolute magnitude (H) 21.915[3]

2006 FV35 is a small near-Earth asteroid in the Apollo asteroid family. It is notable for having a low delta-v requirement for rendezvous.[3] Although its orbital period is almost exactly 1 year, the orbit of 2006 FV35 has a high eccentricity which causes it to cross the paths of both Venus and Mars.

Transfer energy

With a semi-major axis of almost exactly 1 AU, 2006 FV35 has a relatively low transfer energy from the Earth. The delta-v required to transfer to the asteroid varies between 11 and 13 km/s; this change in delta-v oscillates over an approximately 200 year period with the current transfer cost near its maximum of 13 km/s.[3]

External links

References

  1. ^ a b Gerhard Hahn. "EARN: 2006 FV35". Archived from the original on 2009-05-16. http://earn.dlr.de/nea/K06F35V.htm. Retrieved 2009-04-19. 
  2. ^ NASA JPL Small-Body Database Browser on (277810) 2006 FV35
  3. ^ a b c Stacey, R. Greg; Connors, Martin (February 2009). "Delta-v requirements for earth co-orbital rendezvous missions". Icarus (Proof) (7): 822. Bibcode 2009P&SS...57..822G. doi:10.1016/j.pss.2009.01.013.