The Pallas or Palladian family of asteroids is a grouping of B-type asteroids at very high inclinations in the intermediate asteroid belt (Cellino et al. (2002)). It was first noted by Kiyotsugu Hirayama in 1928.
The namesake of the family is 2 Pallas, an extremely large asteroid with a mean diameter of about 550 km. The remaining bodies are far smaller; the largest is 5222 Ioffe with an estimated diameter of 22 km. This, along with the preponderance of the otherwise rare B spectral type among its members, indicates that this is likely a cratering family composed of ejecta from impacts on Pallas. Another suspected Palladian is 3200 Phaethon, the parent body of the Geminid meteor shower.[1]
From the diagram, their proper orbital elements lie in the approximate ranges
ap | ep | ip | |
---|---|---|---|
min | 2.71 AU | 0.25 | 32° |
max | 2.79 AU | 0.31 | 34° |
At the present epoch, the range of osculating orbital elements of the members (by comparison to the MPCORB database [2]) is about
a | e | i | |
---|---|---|---|
min | 2.71 AU | 0.13 | 30° |
max | 2.79 AU | 0.37 | 38° |
|