7794 Sanvito

Sanvito
Discovery and designation
Discovered by U. Munari and M. Tombelli
Discovery site Cima Ekar
Discovery date January 15, 1996
Designations
MPC designation 7794
Alternate name(s) 1996 AD4
Epoch May 14, 2008
Ap 2.6403621
Peri 1.9632563
Eccentricity 0.1470812
Orbital period 1275.5644373
Mean anomaly 12.21499
Inclination 5.67288
Longitude of ascending node 221.51420
Argument of peri 86.01429
Absolute magnitude (H) 13.6

7794 Sanvito (1996 AD4) is a main-belt asteroid discovered on January 15, 1996 by Ulisse Munari and Maura Tombelli at the Asiago Astrophysical Observatory at Cima Ekar ridge near Asiago, Italy. It was named in honor of Roberto di San Vito, an Italian amateur astronomer. San Vito is supporting a new observatory in Montelupo that will bear his name, the "San Vito Observatory".[1]

In the "Sources" section of the science fiction novel 3001: The Final Odyssey; the author, Arthur C. Clarke, jokingly refers to a prediction he made in the first book of the series, 2001: A Space Odyssey (published in 1968), of an Asteroid 7794 being discovered by a "lunar observatory" in 1997.[2] This asteroid had a projectile fired at it by the spaceship Discovery as it passed by on its way to Saturn so that instruments aboard the Discovery might analyze the asteroid's composition.

References

  1. ^ "7794 Sanvito (1996 AD4)". http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=7794+Sanvito. Retrieved 2008-11-12. 
  2. ^ Clarke, Arthur Charles (1997). 3001: the final odyssey. London: HarperCollins. pp. 261. ISBN 0-586-06624-1. 

External links