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5222 Ioffe
Main-belt asteroid
Main-belt asteroid
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| minorplanet | yes |
| image | Ioffe.GIF |
| caption | |
| name | 5222 Ioffe |
| background | #D6D6D6 |
| discovery_ref | |
| discovered | 11 October 1980 |
| discoverer | N. S. Chernykh |
| discovery_site | Crimean Astrophysical Obs. |
| mpc_name | (5222) Ioffe |
| alt_names | 1978 LP |
| named_after | Abram Ioffe |
| (Soviet physicist) | |
| mp_category | main-belt(middle) |
| Pallas | |
| orbit_ref | |
| epoch | 16 February 2017 (JD 2457800.5) |
| uncertainty | 0 |
| observation_arc | 64.08 yr (23,405 days) |
| aphelion | 3.1728 AU |
| perihelion | 2.3788 AU |
| semimajor | 2.7758 AU |
| eccentricity | 0.1430 |
| period | 4.62 yr (1,689 days) |
| mean_anomaly | 172.25° |
| mean_motion | / day |
| inclination | 34.539° |
| asc_node | 220.66° |
| arg_peri | 331.02° |
| dimensions | km |
| 21.73 km | |
| rotation | 19.4 h |
| albedo | 0.1031 |
| spectral_type | B (SMASSII) |
| abs_magnitude | 11.4 |
(Soviet physicist) Pallas 21.73 km
5222 Ioffe, provisional designation , is a rare-type carbonaceous Palladian asteroid from the central region of the asteroid belt, approximately 18 kilometers in diameter. It was discovered on 11 October 1980, by Soviet astronomer Nikolai Chernykh at the Crimean Astrophysical Observatory in Nauchnyj, Crimea. It is the largest of the Palladian asteroids apart from Pallas itself.
Classification and orbit
Ioffe is a member of the Pallas family (801), a small, carbonaceous asteroid family in the central main-belt.
It orbits the Sun at a distance of 2.4–3.2 AU once every 4 years and 7 months (1,689 days). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.14 and an inclination of 35° with respect to the ecliptic. A first precovery was taken at Palomar Observatory in 1952, extending the asteroid's observation arc by 28 years prior to its official discovery observation at Nauchnyj.
Physical characteristics
In the SMASS classification Ioffe is a carbonaceous B-type asteroid, in line with the overall spectral type of the Palladian asteroids.
Photometric observations of this asteroid collected during 2006 show a rotation period of 19.4 ± 0.2 hours with a brightness variation of 0.27 ± 0.03 magnitude.
Naming
This minor planet was named in memory of Soviet physicist Abram Ioffe (1880–1960), an expert in electromagnetism, radiology, crystals, high-impact physics, thermoelectricity and photoelectricity. Ioffe was a pioneer in the investigation of semiconductors. Proposed by the Institute of Theoretical Astronomy, naming citation was published on 5 March 1996 (M.P.C. 26763).
References
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170320233200/http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/sbdb.cgi?sstr=2005222 |url-status = dead |archive-date = 20 March 2017 |access-date = 20 March 2017}}
|access-date = 20 March 2017}}
|access-date = 20 March 2017}}
|access-date = 20 March 2017}}
|display-authors = 6 |access-date= 20 March 2017}}
|access-date = 27 October 2019}}
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